Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 12 September 1949 — Page 12

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The Indians’ Comeback ~

HE rise of the Indianapolis. Indians Baseball Club from. .a low standing early in the season to within half a game of winning the American Association pennant in a few weeks is an example of what can be accomplished in baseball or most any other endeavor when everybody gives the best they have in co-operation as a team. Up until the last weeks of play, Eddie Ash, Tjmes sports editor. pointed out forcibly that the Indians were not doing their best—something was lacking. Gradually the defects were corrected. The players put more into the

* game not only as individuals but in co-operative team play. .

ov cl . hati ; w

and

R

Beginning of Peace?

BUT THE mission, which .is being sent out by the United Nations, means more than that. It ‘could mean the beginning of a durable peace between Jews and Arabs in Palestine, The ‘economic survey Mr, Clapp will direct was proposed by the Palestine Reconciliation Commission, which has been strugpling in vain for weeks over one of the major obstacles to peace left in the wake of the Arab-Israeli war, The No. 1 obstacle is

thereby prevent the bands from returning refreshed and re-equipped. The border with Yugoslavia, much longer and more tortuous, could never have been sealed by Greek forces, The second plece oT news means a lot in hope for the future ragher than in the immediate present, In authorizing Gordon Clapp, head of the Tennessee Valley Authority, to-go to the Middle East as chairman of an economic survey mission, President "Truman has taken a step toward raising the standard of life in a part of the world where poverty is the rule, )

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ol JE “"DOPR. 949 BY NIA STRVICL, INC. T. M. REQ. U. 8 PAT, OFF, tvery fime we start talking about our to emphasize that hers was™ ruptured appendix!” absorbed. That is ‘the real meaning of the United Nations survey mission on which Mr, Clapp has now departed. | The TVA pattern, with its development of water resources, may be applicable to Palestine and the Arab cbuntries, Even after the United Nations mission has made its recommendations, lots of obstacles will stand ip the way of action. But, as President Truman pointed out in his statement on Mr. | .Clapp's appointment, this is in the direction of the Point IV pro-

the like?

- ? aperations

she. never fails

cars for friends of friends,

sugar for a molasses company, and

Yet, -knowing.what we now know about Vaughan's opera tions, the only surprise is that his White House Service Bureau does not have a division devoted to distributing fruit baskets among the poor at Christmas time—in the best city

Standards of Taste

WHAT the general has done is actually as much an offense against national standards of taste as against standards of moral conduct. He has made the White House look like the Washing. ton branch of Tammany Hall, > If Mr. Truman cannot recognize this, he thereby defines his { own standards of taste and makes clear that his concept of the dignity of his presidential office is not a lofty one. But he is not conniving in criminality or genuine scandal, The fuss some Republican Senators are suggests they believe they have their hands on an _earth-shaking

ward fashion,

~

making over Vaughan

he ; : ns rir ry FAN ; Ba Be : A SE © Sb X hpi PY Fa : 2 The Indianapolis Times 2": > isomer | Where All the Dust Is Coming From = Hoosier Forum | ow 3 Be 3 » R . of Lk a ws a A pou BI pA S r i : ~ = — | Question Raise ee + | —a emma]. 3+ Tri _.A SORIPPS-HOWARD NEWSPAPER Ce X : spi pie | : “1 do not agree with a word that you say, bit | = ri ROY W. HOWARD WALTER LECKRONE HENRY W. MANZ On Reds ; Future will’ defend fo the death your right to say i. President : +. Editor Business’ Manager | ! 2 -R. tmp— Tesi & 428 , : ] PAGE_12 Monday, Sept. 12, 1949 What Course Will Be Taken ‘Threat 10. Freedom’ Yank jodisnapons Jump rusian, After Conquest in China? By Yu Jase Oy: toe Sats of Bl » n Sun » » #, Bin, Geni Ree Sts a EA Barve HONG KONG, Sept. 12—What course will wo On Sui at hy — and Clreulations world communism adopt after the Chinese Na- Franklin Delano Roosevelt's shrine at Hyde 0 | EN County, 3 eents a t “oo 2% z | tionalists are finally disposed of ‘as an opposing Park, N. Y., were stoned. . p re 8 carrier duly Puncaz. A aens | force? That could happen in another six months, 0. 3% Toy CE srs al g re (Bloday The major choice to be made by the Krem- Who launched this outrageous attack on the : Fi, 3% ; “caw wm lives of innocent citizens? A mob of lynch dally $1.10 « month ay. 80 » cODY * lin planners would be whether to advance world ot La / ‘In ble minded hoodlums, led by Klansmen a - 1 5551 revolution by all possible means in all poss! to “get” the concert-goers . : Telephone Kiley laces—even at the risk of another world war naires, who were out to “ge . ke r to listen to Paul Robeson at Peeks Give Ligh and the People Wii Pine Thew Uwn Way —or take it easy, and pick.and choose among Yoo gared 0. listen to Win ° - many areas of revolutionary activity, 4 » No X. 1 In either case you may expect to start hear- These storm-troopers, 1000 strong, gathered .. Pair / “Defi Your Terms" ing in another few months of a big Asian con- with stones, rocks, and knives t6 attack the ne : ference, of “workers” or of “people's representa- concert cfowd. According to the New York Coast “If you wish to converse with me, define YOUr | tives” ‘at which Moscow's strategy decisions Times of Sept, 8 ines Roodiuma, Ving stacked NEW YC 3 1 its straw bosses. e crow usses, ine terms.” —Voltaire. will be passed on to One voung Woman The magic — . It was such a congress in Calcutta in Feb- jured at least 145 persons, One young the New PRESIDENT TRUMAN made a point when he said that | ruary, 1948, that tried its modest hand in the had the third finger o yer leit hint fevered, ot Te & : 1 ali . Malaya uprisings--since washed out--and ce- articularly sham J . * such words as collectivism, statism, osiaim and wel- | | 000 international Communist tien With reve the police. The N. H Times aiticles of Sept. re - E 1 = 1 e - are the American e. . | olutionists in Burma, Siam and French Indo- make it painfully clear tha fate state don't sc have been shar pee he hadn't trotted | China. Another such gathering of Communist on the scene had stood passive while the hostile Tor veiF i The point might have been ye : ar Asiatic clans probably will be held, no matter demonstrators stoned the concert-goers. ‘None ae out so many “scare words” of his own-—reaction, special | what happens in China. of the leaders of the mob were arrested. oS interests, organized selfish interests, paid agitators, pro- | ri etable Upset rr CULFRSE At Bukola ited 10 Red Sox : , sue, moters, propagandists. 3 iv . IT'S APPARENT that the Red timetable Robeson, but on a group of visitors to Hyde Bow nedRS ‘Or if, as he says maybe he will later,"he had named | for China already has been upset. Difficulties Park, teaches an important lesson. Violence, vad Bons ’ 1 t who those selfish interests are. within the Communist-conquered areas probably while pretending to attack only Communists, son and sti names and told jus i o tho : have had as much to do with breaking the never stops until freedom and safety of all the allowing But he did make a point. Reds’ military stride as national resistance. As people are destroyed. ; Gen. Eisenhower, speaking on the same day, made | one non-Communist critic of the Nationalist “eo ® @ Yanicses = much the same point. When plain citizens and old soldiers Fegime —a JOPINEY. GeDStl PI ined i ven. ‘Street Car Trouble’ ~ Boston wih try to consider today’s problems, he said, they are trapped | Now it's the Communists’ turn to do likewise, By William E. Ray, 627 West 30th St. even a tie ‘ “ | and they may be doing it.” y William ay, It in an ambush of catchwords, tags and labels which are | Best informed estimates of the Nationalists’ Returning home from the office Friday, I rip generally compounds of confusion and prejudice. | physical capabilities suggest that the govern- stood on the usual corner, at Illinois and Ceorgia eveh to tie / inki rescribed | ment-is good for about six months more at the Sts., awaiting the arrival of an Illinois-Butler «- As a tonic for clearer thinking, the general Pp A | present scale of resistance. Time and again the street car. After 20 minutes of waiting, I de- | To take ita a dose of “precise legal definitions” of such terms as weliare finality of the Nationalist disaster has been cided to walk down a block to Union Station | state, national socialism, radicals, liberal, conservative and | postponed. Each time the situation offered op- where I could see what was holding up traffic. ! Othe tionary — | portunity, even invitation, for appropriate When I arrived at the side street where the i Hopeless reac . ) ., | American ald. We may now be in the last "cars usually start out on a schedule, the operator i But he was more eloquent than precise when he said | months of grace. of my car y oa me that the car immediately ! ay be yd ‘ j- ’ ‘down the middle of the road | The Nationalists are now living of a neces in front of him had broken down and there i Detroit, w that America's path must be i) Ith | sity on their last reserves of silver, gold, foreign would be .a slight delay, and I could secure a i place from between the unfettered power of concentrated wealth on one | currencies and ammunition doled out of the Tie Tapid Titans home by returning 10 the Jat eon flank and the unbridled power of statism on the other.” Formosan visu and aryenal, The govern- 3 original corner, oe to win 12 . =» » - - sm» { ment could run out of money ore it runs sor Patiently I waited for approximately 10 ; the Yankee JOHN FOSTER DULLES of New York, announcing out of the will to resist communism. T . aL “Hy § ; more minutes. Finally the white letters of the pace. Cleve hl 3 " } * : - kh SR g Ce 3 Butler car could be read. Three other people and would hav that he would accept a Republican nomination for the U. 8S. Odds Against Them ? EE pS a - FNRENEN myself attempted to near the tracks in order ! to tie such Senate seat he now occupies by appointment, said: } x Facr with a Stars fonsidered, the | ” - to board the Jolley, Dut we Weis hiakteq w) ps | The Bon “ | Nationalists may. no ag gamble any y passing cars between the eurb an e 80 ¢ been out of Some Republicans want to make “stop the trend to |, “rp, odds weight heavily against them. | PEDDLER’S PASSAGE . . . By John Loveland boarding place. J ing day, m statism” the keynote of their 1950 campaign to recapture | But they are still a gamble—if only a hedging : . Flagging and whistling, we were drowned i siderably r ; i side bet. . out by the acceleration of the street car to the i when they : control of Congress. Mr. Truman Wort poh to Siopoas of The recent flurry. of indecision. by the pro- - a h-Pressu re: Sales Tactics next ‘corner. When- we were passed by -the 20 to 5-anc that slogan by telling his news conference t at the diction- | yincial government of Yunnan in southeast . operator of that same car, anger, as well as erable last aries give several definitions of “statism,” all different. China and Chiang Kal-Shek’s attempts to ham- KNOX is more .than the long drawn out next year. I'd like to have my money back an’ | determination to catch that car, gave me an Boston wa Mr. Dulles, however, had gone at least part of the way mes ut 4 wer ing, sHangeaient With a Jone town that you see on the way to Michigan ov, tear up that order, Roy.” : peded Ineeniive 44 um 10 Washing ion 8t., wher $100 hea os : Szec t! lace where Hen chricker . \ ; 8. toward supplying his definition. When government “assumes | the imponderable handicaps against the reform- | os more than the place ry ‘Something About You’ I am sure a company ‘that brags of the In the fi qt - "” . “" 'd "ul ’ » 2: — an almost total responsibility for public welfare,” when | inkl} Wo HERI COR 10 CH ontent | There are a lot of things you don't see in tT aT rT 1 a er or a re Which they “ it ndeers much of what the individual this Starke County city. If you get theresocca- Pete, I suppose I" could” give K getting a little careless, c v to that end it comma ] in Szechwan by promising that the Nationalist aw Ih le there by Money, but if I was to have to do that I'd sure | drivers have been working so long that the record by d roduces and extends detailed controls into every aspect of | government would delay or even cancel its in- | sionally, and come to know the people : know something about you.” safety factor no longer enters the picture? got but fou p ” that is statis And he is against proposals | tention of moving the capital there—that is, to trading with them, you begin to get a Jeu “What's that. Roy?” : > o ¢ on Beals life,” he said, at 8 mn. : g p > Chungking-—from Canton. The Szechwan war glimpses into the life Bowing through this sand- “I'd know that you don’t wear the pants in Ed Stewar ~—whether they are labeled “dictatorship of the proletariat,” | jords obviously don't want a Nationalist cap- | hill-surrounded-by muck lands. Cook and “She YOUR JAmily.” ; ‘Solution for Trolley Trouble’ Dente whi or “welfare state” or “fair deal’—to have our government | ital set up in their area. The expense of support- Here is the story of Roy Cook an “Why do ya say that, Roy? I wear the pants : plavers. do that. Ing it is not the least of their worries. Wears the Pants.” in my house.” A By A. H. Berman, 2841 N. Delaware The Ath 0 a « . , “wy ’ o " : Go Roy's son, Charley, runs the business now, You don’t wear the pants if you aren't man Though I have not been authorized by the runs and “I know,” he said, “that the present trend, unless Patchwork vernment but several years ago before Charley was .of enough to make a deal and stick by it. If you | Public Service Commission, I have spent con liver their stopped, will be for everybody a bad deal.” : THE NATIONALIST government has al- | age it was L. F. Cook & Son, and competition aren't man enough to stand on your own hind | siderable time—>55 seconds by my stop watch— the Red So P ’ ways been a patchwork. A few years ago the | (ag keen for the farmers’ tractor business. legs, you sure can't have much force at home, studying and analyzing the problems faced by Pete Suder ‘a $ 5:2 patches didn’t show so much. Now Chiang puts - either.” : the Indianapolis Railways. The solution is so Coleman t) SEN. DULLES is a man of Shitastes a ub. Per- pateiies on Fath Ot nique sil Jian Tin Pass News Around ' ; “By gar, I wear the pants in my family.” Simple that I cannot understand why the Public he ope haps he can show the Republican Party how to convince Biles on : SO 3% Hoy CONCERNING the particular deal in ques- ,, J ell here's your chance to prove it. There's ervice Commission experts have not thought cheib™ pitc the American le that what Mr. Truman calls the Fair a y American commitment of ald, even , ™ Pete?) had let the word the 20 bucks, and there's the order, but I know | of it before. » game shyt e uld Jeon deal 1 1 o limited sxtent U ing oven be halted, 3 Hin A ae all um Stel) Dad I ok eaGhor what I'll know if you pick up that money.” 1 suggest that street cars, busses, and trol. die Joost p Deal wo end in a bad deal for all. : . ashington should offer no more than apprecia- | ou a : Whereupon Pete looked at the money long- | leys be discontinued altogether and that the Detroit, : : . : : ledgment of the fact that the Na- | Usually it was the custom to decide what kind of 1y : . 1d-be a i bt bab o his party—and, we think, his count tive smcknow + ’ ingly. There was considerable additional small | would-be passengers send remittances equal to pro If so, he will d party ’ 4 ry tionalists are resisting the Communist world tractor was wanted; .and then pass the news talk throughout which the farmer was visibly | the fares they would have paid to the Indian- took over -4 great service, : : ‘ ; revolution. around to dealers for that particular brand 80 iveq first ope way and then another. The | apolis Railways each month: Eliminating all the the White ..But-the job will have to be done with logical appeals. | - eee reese that Shey woud sen bidding against ON thought of his Bride stayed his hand until the | expenses may, or may not, provide a fair re- for its J0¢ ¢ um ; in believing | f = . another usiness. o-oo thought of his possible savings and the tempta. | turn’ oh ‘the manipilated “Investments of the TTC HS 18H IA -to intelligence, Mr. Tn man doubtless 13 safe 3 oi 8 ) . HAPPINESS a “Maybe T haven't impressed you With Roy's tion of the $20 lying there compelled him to | Indianapolis Railways. Hoot Ever that it can't be done with appeals to-fear, with words that It isn't the clothes that we wear skill at “hoss-trading,” but take my word for reach for it and put it in his pocket. Soon as | As for transportation—since when did the Boh Swift either are not or can't be defined precisely. Nor the number of cattle and such, it, the boy knew his way around. He had the itching palm gained control, Ray turned to | Public Service Commission and the Indianapolig gil Trucks Old Voltaire never heard of the Republican Party. But It isn’t the houses, the lands we own the ‘right temperament for his work, knowing the open order pad before him and began to | Railways care whether and how the publi his 17th w oft 0 mes F p : Nor the grain that matters much. values, and possessed of enough Iriendliness wd write. gets transportation? _ - The Bro he left it some sound advice. vu , the common-touch to be able to speak the 2 proud wor w ¥ © It isn't the silver nor gold : language of his customer. ‘She Wears the Pants’ . Barb into fourt EE § . .. Nor the fancy carriage we drive, ~ On this occasion, Roy got to Pete at the “WHAT'RE you writing there, Roy?” Grom - them, 5 to © * . ’ dl k But the heart that beats within our breast right time apparently, talking him into signing . “Take a good logk at #; Pete, I'm going to ar . burst in tr The United Nations Dea oc That makes our happiness thrive. an order for the tractor and paying $20 lo bind stick Jive right up Vere in the front window for [~~ OFTEN the bride puts initials on her linens Jack Gra — : : ; tad B the deal. In the meantime another dealer ha everybody to see. Read it.” Sure enough. Across -~maybe to make her mark in the social world. Lehner als HIRTEEN countries have been denied admission to the We may dwell in the humblest cot heard of the prospect. we suspeet and probably . “the face of the order in bold letters was the * ¢ & as they en “Unitéd Nations—eight by Russian vetoes and five be- | And drive a plodding old mare, | followed Roy to the farm of said Pete, nraking LU FC aniecled.Shie Wears the Pants.” THE contradiction of ego—an exposition ing streak. : : I aatm © And yet be happy and glad and be | him even a better price. uch a challenge to his stature as a man os . cause of objections by the Western Powers. A . fire-eater who says he has never met his match, 3 Hc jh :' i Absolutely free from care. | Next day Pete called on the Cooks and the was too much for Pete. - His troubled: brow was The Soviets have turned thumbs down on Austria, | . | following conversation occurred: troubled no longer. His chin asserted itself, v_oo “ Relentle: Ceylon, Finland, Ireland, Italy, Jordan, Nepal and Portugal. | So it‘isn’t my dear . .. what you have “Good morning, Pete. You come in to get his chest expanded, and his hand slapped the | _ A PEDESTRIAN _ apologized after being nals agair ) h yk. d th : licatio f Albania. Bul- | That makes- you happy and free, that new tractor already?” © $20 back on the counter. “No, by gar, I wear | knocked down by a motorist. And science front of t} The West has: rejecte e applica lons C , But the state of mind makes the heart “Naw, Roy, I jes got to thinkin.” the pants in my family. You can bring the spends millions searching for freaks of nature, tional ‘Lea garian Hungary, Mongolia and Romania. - pulsate “Thinkin’ what, Pete?” : Dlankety blank tractor out this afternoon and > & a Rigs is ridi sit i s a serious reflection on the With the joy of living . . . you see. “Thinkin’ that maybe ths isn’t a good time have the rest of your money waiting for CHESTNUT season soon will be here again, on } This ridiculous situation- is a seri e —ANNA E. YOUNG, to get a tractor. There's a Yot of work in that You!” Out he strode—while the rest of us and | Whose will we be pulling out of the fire this day—32 1 United Nations’ integrity. $547 N. DeQuincy St. old team yet and maybe Ill have more money ~~ Roy chuckled. year? gave in . « » =» ss = =» “ ry : .. Marty Mar ALBANIA and Bulgaria have a special status. They - — - pre | Ib h : Sowis Foi ’ . E . . ¥ 2 3 . . . * | s § refused to’ recognize United Nations jurisdiction in the = FOREIGN AFFAIRS ...By Marquis Childs | SIDE GLANCES - By Galbrait VAUGHAN CONDUCT... By Bruce Biossat after Jerry dispute arising out of the Greek civil war and they do not . ! | . a= ninth in re ic The Dod ome into court with clean hands. But the other applica- G cl N WwW ib t N t i GOP | tions have been rejected simply as a matter of Pr | 100 e S In as Oo i ssue Jory rom, ic 2 ’ WASHINGTON, Sept. 12—In this day and age one crisis WASHINGTON, Sept. 12—They’re probably saying of . ames, but politica. United Nations has been a profound disappoint- folds into the next with such monotonous regularity that good dent Truman that he's the “same old Harry” oval to ® Pid - shortstc t be ¢ d : . f the or war. it has been news tends to get obscured. Recently there have been two pieces | TE Bet the Presiden: has refused to dismiss his least. a wee men cause, under pressures o yar, > ols ) y y . Gen. Harry Vaughan, despite persistent attacks tusions, bu . } , good riews—small, to be sure, like pin points of light in a | against. the general as a dis | = . : . g y \ietv . st. dispenser of influence i Ibow whe unable to become much more than a debating society. Bit Ark sky, yet fioke the less eanmgiul; oo Ee totes ce n hallowed White a since its ranks are divided anyway by the Communist issue, They bath concern a part of the world that has been full of | The truth is, Mr. Truman could hardly be expectéd to fire "featured © there seems to he no reason why membership applications | trouble—the Near East. The first is, of course, the fact that the Vaughan for the activities so far disclosed by Sénate inv . slam home { ! y nvestiga should be blackballed because nations are pro- or anti: | Greek government seems at least to have subdued the Commu- Aor Luanda) and no im Th small—has been une bia eye . Lo ’ , rane © mav be in con- | nist guerrillas. Confidential dispatches to the State Departmer: | earthed, Measured against the huge blot made on the Harding relief role. Communist. - Whatever adv antages there may be SITICOR . and the Pentagon confirm optimistic news stories. regime by the Teapot Dome aftal, Vaughants doings seem of 1 The ‘Phi tinuing the organization under existing conditions should . This can be put down as positive and conspicuous credit for pinhead size. , . 8 rush, stre e ; lifting the present political barriers, | the Truman policy of containing Communist aggression. Aid to The same kind of thing goes on wherever there is power t Place posit be enhanced by rs g the | nt pe S a of the Greek government to’ date has cost upwards of $700.000,000 be wielded and friendships that can be used for the are of 1073 A¥icto) TO BE SURE ‘Hungary, ‘Mongolia and Romania are and further assistance is requested in the arms aid program. favors. It's a pattern famtHar in state legislatures, county courts } Braves at | ’ - the Sovi . houses, city halls, busiiiess offices, factories, union ‘halls. * Heintzelm: not free agents, but slave states and stooges of the Sov iet Co-Operative Move tess to win his "Empire. But the same can be said of some of the present ONE ENCOURAGING aspect fs the way in which the De- Petty - Politics er Anais .members, such as Poland and Czechoslovakia. partments of State and the Army have co-operated. The Army { BUT that very fact is what makes Vaughan's maneuvers so Ralph 1} If this issue cannot be settled by a gentlemen's agree- | has sent the Greeks some new and powerful weapons. These Seplorable, His offense hy in bringing 10 the White House the at- total to 4¢ ) : F ‘ . ati - i. " | mos etty, n-hor y ment, the alternative would appear to be adoption of Argen- have ‘been invaluable in blasting “out piliboxes in the remate doling Pe bien ys (nich Yrivea on the Son wii tina's proposal to amend the charter by eliminating the big- Crammos Mountains. Marsh Tio had not | that symbolizes America’s highest traditions, Vaughan has set ing streak a od naliit vk or p ) ‘his could never have come about if Marsha ito had no himself up in business as a cheap fixer ent power rere. Russia has threaten io Con | he 33 closed off the Greek-Yugosliv'bordef so that aid for the rebels aid from courthouse hangers-on, ’ Rtertaining petitions of over the ( done, but a functioning United Nations without Russia | could no longer come by thatéroute. Albanta is still a refuge and | Who would have ima ’ -- ; ’ ; . . Yabo! hh 3 : agined that the White House ever would might be preferable to a non-functioning United Nations . me honed hands that Snare the ates dive of hh Greek Aiiies serve as a nerve center for piddling little deals involving trips with Russia. But it is practicable to seal up the Greek-Albanian border abroad for perfume olls, race-track construction problems, new

began to win games with noticeable régu- and 1952, larity until they reached their best, winning eight out -of their last nine. : Bi g It is significant proof that when the best in man is put

She , I affair th 1 w the presence of .severgl Jundred. thousand Arab refugees On | oun or technical assistance to under-developed regions that e at could blow the Democrats to pieces in 1950

ce JPR we- to- ! . . President spoke about in his inaugural address in January. : 4 . ter No one has said very much about these refugees—they may | * With the civil war ended in Greece, that will be the aT rible eApOC Dome disclosures—several hundred times worse than . number close to “800,000. They are. eking out an existence with hope of stability there, too. The Gréek people have suffered ter- anything thus far turned up in the “five percenter” inquiry<the food furnished through the United Nations, most of it supplied = rihly from invasion, then the cruel German-Italian occupation Republican Party responsible for the unsavory mess was voted

npr

Ju : by this country. So long as these people hover in a miserable and finally five years of bitter fighting between Greek and Greek. | PACK Into power fom another four years by .an overwhelming forward in co-operative team work ‘the low standard of no-man's land, wanted by no one; there can je no lasting peace , wiih peace, wealthy Greeks who rushed their capital to New | landslide. - “ ; !

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=~ . * . oe : vor can levat % ton aid the kind of !n the Migdle East. York banks should invest it in productive enterprise at home. | _ If the Republicans expect t6 bowl Mr. Truman over in the or ; be e ey edgho thi Wt the ki li of 1 Only $hrough large-scale rehabilitation which greatly expands = That the least they can do to contribute to the stability of | coming elections, they'llihave to find. more lethal: ES at makes any community a better place to live, | agriculture and develops industry can these “surplus” people be | their homeland. = - li NE, than a sackful of peanuts to throw at him, iv oe B WT 2 i - » i : % \ « 3 » So ys i ; % vi : Fo Ls ; A - i r o = > fy : { % AE i 8 : : fo . - . } | v ; = a - J - 2p 4 Mepis a 2 ' np he itt Ar 4 55 hopin 3 re i ;

gs