Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 11 September 1949 — Page 12
touched off by a race between wages and prices which finally would lead to a business bust. The second peril was a series of vast strikes, not only in steel but in other big industries in
which the steel settlement would establish a pattern.
While neither side has accepted the findings announced |
Sen. William E, Bricker and Sen. Homer E ninth on the “worst” list,
Whole Thing Silly
Jenner was runner-up on Capehart placed
JUST to indicate how silly the whole thing |
can be, Sen. Capehart was tied for ninth place
which doesn’ t make sense. Then’ maybe you ean recall pack in 1935 when Ham Fish, reactionary’ Congressman from Franklin Delano Roosevelt's home district, was warning us against Communists. ‘Harry Truman says the spy investigation is a red herring and there wasn't more than one Commu-
vv i dee FS = : A ’ RO TI ” TH " 3 " “ x id ; 4 vs - . ’ : 4 or > J or f . N | > . : vt: : 3 Y to / ; a a > ’ fev ITY “The Indianapolis Times DEAR BOSS. By Dan Kidney F Oo FO 7 * Opinion Poll Hoosier orum IN "LA SCRIPPS-HOWARD NEWSPAPER Ee | pi it ‘ — : “1 do not agree vith x i thet yeu say, © ROY W. HOWARD WALTER LECKRONE HENRY W.MANZ T d Si | L © ‘President Editor Business Manager | erme t will defend fo the death your ig to sey HS Sunday, Sept. 11, 1949 Danger Seen in Ballot on | PAGE 12 y, Sep ‘Best and Word’ $ ‘Politics Confusing’ “Amer est a ors!’ Senators ane; mes Publish. . . { By C. D, C,, Terre Haute g Bootes Wr otseetvety Faia ies Tomine WASHINGTON, Sept. 10-—Dear Boss—Just Them “conservatives” ahd reactionasits and If the nad, Pues, Sunes o Gireaiscions Nawspaser Aliance WEL Wart pocause Pageant magazine conducted a Wash- liberals and progressives waar the Fair Deal * v's ington press gallery poll which caused hoth In- | have got me all confused. The liberals seem to WASHI vif deny area oy carrie ri “winds. ‘To by diana Senators to be listed among the “worst,” | have found there are a few dishonest grocers d the 3: ry wining hE HELE | it “ain’t necessarily so.” who are horning in on the relief racket, and I an wo! iT 3280; ail other tier stata J. After all the Washington press gallery polls | presume if they want to dig deeper Shey whi will find mission sch last year showed that President Truman wasn't 25 corrupt politicians and a thousand chiseling soldiers whe Telephone RI ley 8851 going to be re-elected. 1 was one of the wrong | relief clients for every dishonest grocer. ! Give LigAS and the People Will Pins Ther Vwn Way Wilburs who voted that way in 1948, but I "The reactionaries knew back in 1938 the New country. plead “not guilty” in the Pageant case. Al- | Dealers were trading food for votes and they “They’r . though I received a ballot asking me to list ‘didn't need Harry Hopkins to tell them later, they're The Steel Report— | the Senators I thought “best” and “worst” I “We will spend and spend and elect and elect,” | promptly filed it in the waste basket where I because they knew it was already being done, over wi A Portal to Peace COmfiGer Such games belong. Then there is an avowsd Hberal, Andy Ja- most, two. 3 1 a h - THE STEEL fact-finders have made a report which seems | ,..h selections. So the “worst” was the Senator | { sold, whe Jas decided. snore i lh SqougH 3 dev sted pers to clear the way for industrial peace. It can, and should, | you Jee Jeast ang the Pay he ove Who Claimed when the Wagner Law was passed it suc I a | suited you. As. you know, - | tors over the Tha : avert two deadly perila, either of which could cause a major, | pypiican~Sen. Robert A. Taft as “best” and I a a, there is still breath lest th depression. First of these dangers was a wave of inflation, | Republican Sen. John Bricker as “worst.” Our not enough democracy, according to Andy, dent.”
Washingtor
Forei
today, the report is a careful document written after hear- | on the “worst” list with Sen. Harry F. Byrd Bist to 6000 government employees, which of fr ow ings of unprecedented length and detail, and is certain to AD But Sen. Byrd placed fourth on the | course doesn't include sympathizers a Jd carry great weight. As always happens in such cases, it will According to Pageant, only Sens. Capehart | However, since there were three million. Pl not fully satisfy either“side. But it seems to provide a sane | and George W. Malone (R. Nev.), failed ‘to government employees during the war, it would ans h t jati leading to ttl nt not too | get any ~best” votes at all. make about 500 Commies working for the gov_approach to negotiations leading a settlement no | To {illustrate the difficulty and point the ernment. Most of them seemed to be in the State Senatol obnoxious to-either party. | danger in making such listings, I' Jn one of Department and a lot of them seemed to have — | the most controversial figures in-the- Senate: access to secret documents that we grass roots mini d There will be a ast Yoeponaiy oft both the fons Sen. Claude Pepper (D. Fla. ). He placed seventh Americans werent allowed to peek at. : an |e companies 0 ge ogether now and setlle @I' | on the “worst” list, I could go on if space permitted but it would dispute . { Suppose you are an unrebonstructed New + Sod only get > more Npace pen I just ean't seem WASHIN , are ra REI ! Dealer who believes in the abr Deal Dames LL to figure out whether the conservatives are hospital withi THE y ic i cratic platform even more than you Co nN liberals or the liberals are conservatives, Who i REPORT may prove of great historic importance. | President Truman, you very well might put OUR TOWN... By Anton Scherrer is supposed to be in the lead and be ahead of will take him BS TEL iat Ad Ig ert oe A Ee Traits Shier Patra La iia gC time In this political game called the Fair Deal, This is § anyway—the reactiona or the progr . : can business. ox x new | coe nei uate wr | BOON Tarkington's Art Talents | =oemegmim gee policy. His The immediate effect can be that of averting a new | , o") "is one of the outstanding debaters in 1 shaky stiuctu
wave of runaway inflation. The board held against a wage increase because general conditions in the steel industry and
the Senate,
‘Red’ Pepper
A COMPREHENSIVE review of Booth Tark-
. Ington’s “Your Amiable Uncle,” which went on
sale last Friday, calls for two critics—one to
When John-a-Dreams expired in April, 1897, and it came time to distribute the assets, Booth Tarkington received, as his share, a batch of
‘The Basis of Socialism’ By H. W. Daacke, 2338 Ransdall St. Socialism is the name of a widespread body
tion needs him for consideratic to any other of
outside it do not justify one. SHOULD you be conservative or reaction appraise he Selectable weiss; the other to Sketches which he had been asked to make for | doctrines and a world-wide movement, take Turn still ¢ “The cost of living has remained stable within the last ary, the Florida Senator would be labelled BRVS ve - ” o A fo 18 PeR-and-fuk oe ETH WL Heh hs, ren ry, Ing many different forms. possibilities for year; in fact, it has slowly declined,” the fact-finders pointed | “Red” Pepper in your books 354 promptly every available margin of the looking gentleman dressed in a fancy 18th cen- We can only say that socialism is essentially " FIRT. let out. “The post-war race between rising wage rates and | heroine him for deserting the Southerners letters written by Mr Tark tury costume. He was posed in the act of show- | & ¢ fosirine gud a movement aiming | gl, the eol- man U8 rising posts of livirig has-been called off by economic forces.” = and fignting for civil rights laws. To them he jugton Dat visit abroad. They Fa yah 8 xa an expression of distrust, a” intefest of the mass of people by means of the terials on which
on dollar adva
llawag,” the label placed on Southern- . . - ; - 3 common ownership and collective control. of o that there is no reason for redress | '** cA were addressed to his incor In the course of hig brooding over the re- FELD So the hours § und tha g ere A oh : ers who fraternized with earpetbaggers alter rigible Jameson nephews, IRF Eo Ngo RE Appeared to | the means of production and exchange. po delivery. of mat in the form of higher wages. It pointed out that a wage in- | the Civil War. In fact Sen. Richard B. Buses John (aged 14), Donald (aged Ooo NRriaL, Hiort radially throats oo Fills The Communist Manifesto, drafted in 1848 | Third, - grant crease in steel would set a pattern for other industries. This | iD. aah Child Bun pepper mt Ma a % | 12) and Booth the baby (aged the legend—the character of Monsieur Beaucaire | by Marx and Engel, is in Staetql Tegurded dotias ad 4 A . 1), the same ree lucky and, fi , all the.-material T . as the starting point in what own as tary . could cause rising prices and have bad economic results. | UnruMed, the Floridan, who is a native of | yi. who, 13 years later, had nally or Booth Tarking Se Rng OR En What we sal
What the board clearly had in mind was the sort of boom
that finally leads to a bust.
Alabama, said: “I thank the junior Senator from Georgia for his contribution,” and then went right on talk-
the good fortune to have Penrod” dedicated to them, v The demonically- “deft illustrations sprinkled
ton’s. first full-length novel.
‘Gentleman From Indiana’
“Utopian Socialism” that had gone before. The materialistic conception of history working
itself out in a succession of class struggles be-
still goes: No rabbit from a ficult problem.
exp i Arn: | ing about the subject under discussion. If par- | ¢pn,q,gnout the 192 pages of “Your Amiable THAT'S RIGHT. “Monsieur Beaucaire” (and t jenti f the new Socialist report is “hope FROM a long term standpoint, the findings in behalf of | jjamentary punctillo counts, Sen. Pepper cer- Uncles go to hohe, suspicion, long enter- not “The Gentleman from Indiana”) was the came’ the ienlitc Jas i of ‘Marxian inspira- Long-range social insurance benefits and pensions also can have tremen- tainly "ith 3 point. yardgticc for iessures | (iinet in certain circles around Bere, Jat. Mr, net ove willie by Boot Tarkington. How. Yon. knock down fu dous i rtan ese i 0: agreed * | Tarkington led a double life; indeed that he liv ver, “The Gentleman from Indiana” was’ the * an ar impo: ce. Th are proper charges against man- | ment, the “best” and “worst” list in Pageant 4 , io. BRON lex one of which was that sphere of first to be published (1899). It's one of those Whi Second Jape wa Sark by the Aree encouragement agement, the fact-finders declared. They also held that the | appears to me to tell more about the prejudices | pyngica) art where the edges of reality are trick questions designed to trap those who pride | oo 0 Stern onal ng A rahi ua capital abroad " | of the reporters than about the qualifications of themselves on their knowledge of stud books. ciation in under Marx's ership. steel industry “could well afford to the cost of the pro- pu 3 | ey, the edges of fantasy insanely sharp. 8 The desire to lessen the inequality of in- sibility. Ty pay P the Senators. Be that as it may, I know of no other book The extraordinary success of Mr. Tarkinge . ¥ * Frama it recommended. { There is another front on which T want to | 0" ot hoe the gift of impishness revealed by ton's novels put an end to his career as an illus- Somes and to ay ihe Rats a a on as Whisky Pri “Social insurance and i hould be idered a | defend the Hoosiers. Two of them had their | yo “markington when, some 40 years ago, he trator; at any rate, for a period of 26 years. In e means of a ng a can ce pensions sho conside a | pictures hanging in Col. James V. Hunt's office.. | ObE A oy ot oiider "his earth-bound 1923, the first of the dizzy Coolidge days, “The safely ed as the common doctrine of CLESMOBS patt of normal business cost to take care of temporary and | He is, you recall, the man whose conduct In | | ob. "with the wonders of. Europe—not only Collectors’ Whatnot” appeared. It was a devas- all schools of socialism. bottle os oa is
permanent depreciation in the human “machine,”
in much
the same way as provision is made for depreciation and in-
surance of plant and machinery,” the board said.
Total cost of the insurance and pension benefits yecommended is estimated at around 10 cents an hour—a consid-
erable gain for the unions if they settle at that price.
PRESIDENT TRUMAN immediately asked an 11-day delay in any strike action.. During that time of truce—which certainly should be granted—will come the troublesome
period of reaction to the board's recommendations.
Both the steel companies—which employ a majority of the nearly one million steel workers—and the union must
take a position.
The welfare of the whole nation is at stake. It is far
ing of America as a whole.
charging for favors from government agencies
launched what has become known as the “Five |
Per Cent” investigation.
Pictures on Wall
AMONG the pictures on Hunt's wall, undoubtedly used to impress his dupes, were those of Sen. Capehart and Rep. Charles ‘A. Halleck™ (R. Ind.)- Sen. Capehart first said he didn't recall giving Col. Hunt the picture. Later he
by way of belles-lettres, but also by way of a related art which, in his hands, had the trick of turning sober unbending words into figurines of fun,
| Professional Illustrator
4
remembered vaguely that Hunt was introduced |
- to him by Ed Hayes, former national commander
of the American Legion, Regardless of the circumstances, such mat. ters are so common here that to put a sinister connotation on picture-giving would be wide of the point. For politicians to pass out autographed pictures is as commonplace as it is with Hollywood stars. Sen. Capehart must have hundreds of them
are a “dime a dozen” is to dine at the Occidental restaurant next door to the Willard Hotel on
. page and touching o
THE truth is that, exept for a quirk of fate,
-Booth- Tarkington might have been a _profes-.
sional illustrator and, possibly, . a painter to reckon with, As early as 1886 when he was only 17 years old, the Tarkington boy designed the paper cover for Riley's “The Boss Girl.” It depicted an imp plunging headyfirst from the top of the a cannon in the shape of an ink bottle. It was the most original artconception developed in Indianapolis since 1878, the year Lew Wallace portrayed “Cypid” with a pair of purple wings. The Tarkington boy's urge for self-expression assumed the shape of a problem at a very early
ton ‘solved it by doing both and, what's more,
along lines of least resistance. Which is to say
tating satire written by Hugh McNair and Kenneth L. Roberts for which Booth Tarkington furnished the illustrations. Don't be misled by the title page which labels the compilers as Cornelius Obenchain Van Lopt, Milton Kilgallen and Murgatroyd Elphinstone.
From that day to this, nobody to my knowl-
edge has -ever-been-able to -tell-which one-of-the—i
borrowed names represented Booth Tarkington.
* THe nearest anybody ever got to solving the
mystery was Dr. Carleton B. McCulloch who, on one occasion, attempted to learn the secret. In return he received the illustrated letter submitted herewith. It comes in handy today, for it reveals the same style (possibly a little more developed) which the demon of deftness practiced when he wrote the letters of 1903. If you are hopelessly grown up, or if you think you can’t be fooled by the pranks of goblins, do have a look at “Your Amiable Uncle.”
The words “Socialism” and “Socialist” appear to have come into use at nearly the same time in both England and France about 1830. They were employed to describe, in Great Britain, the teachings and followers of Robert Owen, ‘with his “social system.” I still maintain that, based on reason of
on trial in the case of the British Labor Party, with its socialistic leanings, in their effort to ameliorate the social and financial welfare of the British workers. Since the only source
‘of wealth is the natural resources processed by
the brain and brawn of the workers, why all this hue and cry from those who derive their livelihood by exploitation of the two things that produce all wealth, natural resources and laborers? If you can prove to the satisfaction of the man of average intelligence that two ideologies, diametrically opposed, can exist in
AMERICANS who can't see why Western
facts, -no--Soclalist philosophy. of .any. kind is.
long-expected p big-name bott! kies. Price line: while on some many, trade ex Reason: Post are now comin stocks are-at-
; million gallons
to provide 21 b whisky for eve] Trade official expect much re whisky prices— a gallon, feder $1.60) don’t lea cutting. Truman's No up military-assi Europe is repo
ON POLITIC
scattered from coast to coast and so, no doubt, | Virtuous scout that I am, it's my good deed for | Pure and unadulterated form within a state at i amb: greater than the welfare of either a single union or a single | does Charley Halleck. When he was majority | age. .He wanted to sketch and he wanted to 4) q,, CL ’ the same time, I will concedélyour assumption, | Bruce, Buin | leader of the Republican 80th Congress, his pic- { Write, a quandary. not unlike the dilemma that r : . , crm } na. b 4 industry. | ‘tures were in great demand. | confronted William Makepeace Thackeray or, - expected any Both sides will now have on them the burden of think- | All one has fo do to see how such pictures | for that matter, Lew Wallace. Both Tarking- Jian What Others Say Action Tost
Cl (LB Atlabatloed
Fortunately, the fact-finders' report seems to be a | famed Pennsylvania Ave. There the walls are | that le started by illustrating his own writings. Europe cannot have a union similar to that of first real test ( statesmanlike and intelligent document, arrived at after a | SoVEreq ih Pintoararhs Of the Seat an) Ber Artist-Author i TT this, country fall to realize the depth of, tra- - | en " . | ® v r hin “A. ¥ i patriotic display of care and study. It should open the way | IN SUPPORT of which I submit John-a Lit kes 4, ditions of separate nationalism and the diffi- { 26th district. T
people will get a better deal from the che!f.
Dreams, an arty magazine started by a Prince-
¥ /
culty of doing away with customs barriers and
crats have fine
to a peacetul settlement in steel and other industries. « | Waiters prefer their tips in cash. ton classmate. It was. in this short-lived: uniting different monetary systems, —Prof, | ho : Se circ —————="| monthly, in September 1896, that Booth Tark- Gc , 7 ny | Peter Geyl, University of Utrecht. 1 pubiicana fuay COUNTERPOISE | ington made his first appearance in print (out- Lied * i id . Those Tra ic ‘Souvenirs’ | side of college publications) in the dual role of . . I AM a shy ane sid person, and although ning pal 9 As you compile your Book of Life artist-author, Lem Cd G airfe | I understand that people will laugh and doubt ‘outcome al HOSE hundreds of small arms brought home by GI's oR win leaves foe everywhere |. ° His initial contribution was a poem of 10 | that I have now finished with motion pictures, | cant, Repo from foreign battle fields as prized possessions of their =~ RemEMPer -. . that With pages clear quatrains entitled “A Letter of Regrets” for — } 1 Wish io inform yOu iat my deeision 14.2 Roosevelt swee
Some will be etched with care.
which he thought up three pen-and-ink illustra-
firm one.—Actress Ingrid Bergman. v ¢ + .
only to lose
soldiering days are becoming potential killers rather than r cw taker th ” tions. Pon't let it fool you that the contribu- A SERRATE oY hero=Der the harmless war “ venirs" Ww i n to be. or you know akes the sunshine tion carried the name of Cecil Woodford. It is A D woman and a mother have y SL sou enirs they were inte ded t, be Also the-¢louds of rain | now an established fact that the spirit of Cecil just as much right to a career as a single wom- Coffey Jr.—kil The accidental shooting of a 15-year-old Washington To make a harvest goodly yield | Woodford incorporated the body of Booth Tark- an. I don't think they neglect their homes, be- plane crash. High School girl by her brother ab he was playing with an ,. Of lusdious golden grain. ington. Sause if3 io Many machAnics) devisas Oh the crate. Canmgnn
Italian-made pistol brought-home as a war “souvenir” is an-
other tragic instance of the dangers of these weapons,
In all of these shootings the péysons involved “didn't
know: it was loaded.”
. LE I . » = 0» ~ THIS tragic story may be repeated many times in the
the always curious youngsters who can't resist playing with them.
Keeping loaded guns handy in the-home as protection is’ . far more dangerous to members of the family than the men-
And so my dear . . cit is with life, Days must be balanced . .. too; So make the Hest and beéhefit By cares which come to you. . ~— ANNA E. YOUNG, » 3547 N. Deguiney St. é¢
had a rofnance.”) In the habits of this hippo There should be a hunch or two, As he takes his datly dip-o ’ In the quiet of the zoo.
Two months later Mr. Tarkington achieved local fame. signed the cover for “A November Leaf,” an angual published by the Fowles Mission of Indianapolis, but also the illustrations for “Dance Music,” hig own story in the same number. This time there was no mystery concerning the iden-
jorie”’) was an authentic example of his co-ordi-nated twa gifts. In the other two, he limited himself (in the one case) to {llustrating-another author's work; and (in the other case) to illuatrating a couple of unsigned poems. It is possible—and, indeed, highly probable-—-that Booth
On that occasion he not only de. ===
ih they can do bath.— Olive H, Huston, ublve director of the National Federation of Business and Professional Women's Clubs. LJ a THERE are few: Jews left in Germany, They are the subject of pity, not anti-Semitism, —Rev. Martin Niemoller,
man. ie 4 9 I'M just an 6ld channel! catfish.—~Vice President Alben W. Barkley, on living in a goldfish bowl, * +
|
John P. Saylor, and war vetera GOP had ne previous 1949 “sional elections Democratic Ne »
EE | tity of the artist-author. : * S k G . i ! Subsequently, John-a-Dreams published three THE only sovereignty worth fighting for eeKs urr future unless the service men who brought these weapons FOSTER'S FOLLIES more contributions by Booth Tarkington only and dying for is the sovereignty of morality MORE POLI home dismantle these guns and keep them out of reach of New. York—Hippopotamus in old age; never .| ‘one of which, however, (“The Kisses of Mar- and law.—Plerre Henri Teitgen, French States- Joe Foss, ex-N
Congressional winner, likely unseat Sen. ( Dakota's Repu next year. Fos of South Dako
ace of a night prowler. 80. next time we see some pip-o. Fatrizgion yas Lis author of both naga I RAISE the point of order to what right resentatives. ) ) = (We're rotund, though not robust), poems. oul nvestigation prove this to be has anyone here to look into the activities of Lehmag-Dulle Any bandit who plans to rob a home would have his We shall take this hippo’s tip-o— true, today’s catalog of dual Performances will ) a member of Rep. James E. Van ate race will | weapon ready for use long before the victim could go get his Like a hippopota- -must! bulk even bigger. Sample of Mr. Tarkington's art. Zandt (R), Pesmiyivenin: “level affair, i
their way. But
gun anyway. Erste - — Having a gun in the home would mean shooting in the NATIONAL "MEDICAL CARE . , . By Peter Edson Kee Pp tight oR event of an invasion and shooting means somebody likely Biman adit dirty, mud-
will get shot and most generally it would be the person who
keeps a gun around for “Shherion.
Helping Our New Residents
MANUAL HIGH SCHOOLS organization _of special
Conflicting Angles Seen In Doctors’ Fight On Health Program
WASHINGTON, Sept. “educational campaign”
10--American Medical Association's new
18 that the AMA has no real health-pian of its own to offer as a substitute,
against compulsory national health | - insurance has some queer angles. What they seem to point up
|
“their diagnosis,
There is of course no danger that the patient-—meaning the whole U. 8. public—will die enmasse while the doctors are arguing about what should be done. But it is to wonder why the
| docs haven't grabbed their satchels and climbed into their bug-
gles a little faster, in order to visit the national bedside and make It is no great self-compliméRt for the U, §.
THIS seems to be due not to California's sunshine and
| "healthy climate, but to the iact that in 1945 and 1949 Gov. Earl
Warren—a Republican, you'll remember—introduced legislation for state-wide compulsory health insurance. This so &larmed the California Medical Association that it spent $600,000 pro. moting voluntarfy health insurance policy sales, They got 6,000,
volving everyth issues to pre-wa cartels, Pros themselves wa York voters c! welfare-state i dorses “Fair | poses "atiam,
classes in English and citizenship for displaced persons Dr. L. E. Henderson. AMA president-elect, says that within mie), PEAgNSION: to Mgue this ins in ‘the us that the facts | 000 people insured. out of a total population of 10,000,00. the next vear the association will put out a series #f reports on | about U. 8. health needs are unknown or grossly exaggerated. | from Europe is much more than merely extending a helping American health problems. They will cover the costs a There are health statistics by the mile. During the war, every | Can't Afford Either Plea fo Fe hand to these new residents. of present U. 8. medical, clinical and hospital seryices. Present | doctor was indexed. TAKING California statistics at tace value, what about the MIDWEST . ¢ In a broader sense it is a commendable step in social | voluntary health insurance plans will be analysed. The need for AMA says 61900.000 Americans now have voluntary health | 40 per cent of the people uncovered? Those who can afford to pleading with t more medical education and better distribution of doctors will insurance coverage of some kind, out of a total population of | PAY doctor bills can of course afford to pay insurance premiums. at partys Jers
progress for the benefit of the whole community. For neglect
be considered,
150,000,000, This represents a jump of 8,000,000 insured since
But what about the people who can't afford sither
- ference at Slo
tell them what
| of aliens who are earnes ing to make readjustmen Jan. 1. There seems to be a hope that this rate of coverage will Whitaker; director of the AMA ton] campaign, eition ly ying is would J ts to | Answer fo Ewing Ancrease, eventually making national health insurance unecessary. | "YS medical care of the gat we isn't the doctors’ problem, Tha . Republican become. good ns o anapolis would result in frre- | “UC ots st. Saaily’ ove About half of those covered have insurance against surgical | 8 aid to be the problem of the local community. The man worried about ble harm t unity relati AMA plan, when it finally evolves, will appar- | ,,4q nogpital only.” The other half have insurance st [-May be sick only because he-also needs food, clothing or housing Democratic Br para 0 community relations. ently be an answer or a companion plece to Federal Security | non »oenitalixing Saye a doctors’ pri None of the AMA spokesmen will position ou whether to cook up som Community leadership could do well to encourage more | Administrator Oscar Ewing's national health conference | oui "WCRIIURE SCENE U6 HUQersl CORON BO OWES CE | there should be federal aid for Rousing 08 Teed he meee met it. Mr. such projects in an effort tq create a better understanding | Tran ne Eon tromart recommended mors medical | ©f the insured have complete health insurance protection. | Doustaied. They a ye * that there shoul oul 4 be federal aid for a «of the conflicting probléms of various groups of citizens in | research and education, more hospitals and more doctors, insur- No Statistics a s 4 pa Supr ag, Aop . education, federal accepting a EF or midst, | oped afainst dion oo Bit Te pata of Chis: Byt 4 t SHERE Seem go. bebo statistics on what income-groups are ——~But they are bills Medical care for all | “bul Eios ils | goes ¢ | cove voluntary health insurance polici Th is . would . : Living conditions lin any expanding metropolitan area | doetors believe voluntary health insurance should be given a “estimate trat ‘80 per cent of those odie ay bin middie saint aw or vi health Ire. Tact nay Ato Ask Radio ek sma i | Tn | EL | es = Tey oho iB g | uc + |" experience, where there are better health insurance data than In summary, federal thi - he ips among ita Sitise groups ! ; 4 Poses and the British government already has. -in any other state. “| an rigat, but fede Vad 0 ad a to be ence this week
