Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 2 October 1949 — Page 11

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_ STATE POLITICS .

"GOP Chief Slic

SUNDAY, OCT. 2, 1919

aay

. By Robert Bloem

i

-

kers

was deEvades Mrs. Frazer Appointment rooment was angry. de + lican places as being not far Issue in ‘Practical Politics’ Way trom a double cross. They fig- : TI'S ONLY a snap judgment, but from here it looks as though Jred Me Sate nnd 8 and Anat Guy G . Gabrielson is wasting his talents as GO GOP national chair- was all Indiana would get. He ought to be ambassador to Russia. rielson. He gE Same Ws. Sab i sany exe to Tutisuipsiis tg. mire 8 sjeuis. Tie ter with Indiana’s two Senaa ty 0 many Republicans who come to Indiana do, et tors who, while they probably ack putting His fuistion; Ww Insisad than just a few Indiana Repub- didn’t dance with joy, at least mouth, as so many aE 3 pram © A RTIrly jo the Sates > who come to Indiana do TH eave eg eh a Wr a . TE oe a do, he ¢rom the fact that Mr. Gates, nounced the appointment of Mr al gid Nis Yay right out of 55 Indiana GOP national com- Gates. the site RE . was gone be- mitteeman, was supposed to be Then he stood right up before jore | eudin’ Hoosier working to get a job for Mrs. more than 1000 Hoosier Repubowe anything to get Mabel Fraser, state vice chair- licans and told them not to get sore : man. The job was to be the their’ blood pressure all up— ject of Mr. Gabrielson’s $10,000-a-year spot as assistant maybe they could have the Fraspeech here was li- to the post open ser appointment, too. He didn’t

meant, too. The national GOP chief was beaten to Indianapelis about 24 hours by a report that he intended to make former Gov. Ralph Gates legal counsel for the national committee. More

the vivacious Mrs. Fraser in a posgition to do the state GOP a lot of good when (they never say “if”’) a Republican is elected President in 1952. The Gates de-

as in. That, we believe, is where Mr.

Gab-

chance the job might be shorn of its $10,000 salary. They feit that if this should happen, it would have to go to some very rich gal who could afford to work almost full time in Washington without pay. Mrs, Fraser might be frozen out. But most of Mrs. Fraser's boosters insisted the real reason for the several months’ delay Mr. Gabrielson announced in the appointment of a lady assistant was just an economy

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

Out Of Tense Hoosier Situation

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matter. They firmly believe that as soon as the national $10,000 is coming from, they will make the appointment and it will undoubtedly be Mrs, Fraser.

Republicans have been accusing Democrats of working this veiled system on the voters for nearly 20 years. However, nobody has been able to work it on the hard-to-please Russians so far. That's what we mean when we say Mr. Sabricsan could be used to advantage from the ciandpoint of the country as 4

WiiOle “still say a guy who can put that one over on the Hoo-* sier Republicans, who certainly aren't behind anybody when it comes to being suspicious, ought to be ambassador to Russia. .

w = IN HOSPITALS AND doctors’ offices its getting fairly common to see a print of the famous painting “The Doctor” with the caption “Don’t let politics enter this picture” or words to that effect.

It doesn’t say anything, though, about the picture entering politics. That is essentially what happened at the Indiana State Medical Society convention this week. The docs, it seems, added $20 a year to their dues to fight what they call “socialized medicine, their word for the administration’s conipulsory national health insurance plan. Purpose of the war chest, so the reports say, is to “fight anyone in the coming elections who favors socialized medicine and to support anyone who opposes it.” That puts the docs right along side the CIO and the AFL in a fight which parallels the unions’ battle for repeal of the Taft-Hartley “slave labor” law. Again the words “slave labor” are those of partisans, not ours. About the time the docs were passing their resolution, Mr. Gabrielson was pointing out that the big health question might be a sure enough major

issue in next year’s election. To be an issue, of course, somebody bas to take each side of

tr Gebricison said the GOP Crate Party. nh : wasn’t set yet on its policy— One distinction might ‘be that : that is on how strong the party the medical profession a would on one side or the never reach the : other. I,\f it's to be an is- where the tail can wag the dog .. sue, and not’ just another case in the past : of “we’ll do thé same but do it with the CIO-Democratic com- . better,” the GOP presumably is bination. ; * going to have to go all out The method may be effective. | against national health insur- On the other ha: the public ':

ance. The half-way measures have been tried and the Republicans haven't done very well on

them. Mr. Gabrielson doesn’t into politics. : strike us as a man to lead his A sweeping vieparty on half-way issues. He tory with the doctors and the wants a real fighting issue, one GOP together on a “major iswhich, as he puts it, has gue” could and probably would enough emotional appeal to be be interpreted as a 2 dramatized.” from the people” for national * = = health insurance. any THAT SEEMS TO put the shrewd politician could have doctors and the Republicans warned the good doctors that pretty well into the same boat. it isn’t smart to climb into a ._ The medicos’ decision to get boat until you know who is into the fight directly during going to be in it with you and an election campaign can easily whether the boat will float.

Washington Calling—

Coal Chiefs Of ‘Stop Jo Time or Go

Believe Fuel Will Be Priced Out of Many Of Its Markets if Costs Rise Higher

By The Scripps-Howard Newspapers WASHINGTON, Oct. 1—Key to the steel strike is John, Whether the Soviet pressures

L. Lewis. . That may sound strange,

Coal companies figure they have to stop John L. this time or they'll go broke. Coal will be priced out of many of its markets if costs rise higher, they argue.

Steel companies (and in some cases they're the same men) figure there’s no point in, giving in to Phil Murray's steel workers

now if they're going to have to coal stockpiles are exhausted.

Dope is that if coal miners go back to work, steel companies would be more inclined to try to make a deal with Murray.

Tou have a stake in current| pension battles. Outcome in steel, other industries, may seem remote. But: Whole social security structure is undergoing change. Before it ends, amount you'll have to live on when old may be altered drastically. Many officials here see grave danger to government's social security program in drive by big unions for pensions financed wholly by employers. Others think union success in getting better pensions will goad Congress to act now on Hberalizing social security. : * - ®

New Standards Fixed

HIGHER STANDARDS set by unions are also stimulating drive in states for larger old-age-as: sistance payments. And Townsend old-age pension organization has a new lease on life. It's launched new weekly paper, is arguing that only Townsend Plan can save the country from wave of strikes-for-pensions. Precedents have been set by Lewis coal miners and by Reuther auto workers in Ford settlement. Other union leaders won’t stop trying till they do as well for their members. Social security advocates say business and industry made serious mistake by not supporting government program for extending pensions to workers not now covered and increasing benefits. They argue that private pensions for organized workers can become heavy burden for biggest

Stiff Soncie Race

Set Up Cry hn L. This to Wall’

but here's the way it works—

shut down soon anyhow because

COLORADO'S Republican Sen. Millikin faces a stiff fight for reelection next year. His opponent may be one of two Democrats — Gov. Lee Knous or Rep. John A, Carroll. Colorado polls —if you trust polls — indicate Knous could beat Millikin, that the

little harder for Carroll. Truman administration

Sen. Millikin may decide which man Millikin

faces. Knous has been recommended for federal judgeship by Sen. Ed Johnson (D. Colo.). If President Truman appoints’ him he gets a Democrat into the senatorial race more friendly to his program than Knous would be. Program blueprints had been subpenaed by former CAB Chairman James M. Landis, who now represents interests fighting proposed merger of American Overseas Airways and Pan-American. Landis claimed program would shéw Pan-American monopolizing Latin American fields built during the war with U. S. government funds. State Department first objected on ground disclosures would embarrass good neighbor republics; later withdrew objection. Then Defense Deputy Stephen T. Early told CAB

corporations, impossible load for small employers. And they fear more security for| organized minority of workers) may increase insecurity of unorganized majority.

Meanwhile new drive is being]

made in Congress to get House approved of liberalized plan for! nearly all workers. » = =

Safeguard Atom Stocks

ATOM FRONT: Neither plu-|

tonium nor uranium 235 deterior-

ates—unlike other types of am-|

munition, armaments.

closures would jeopardize na-

Chairman O'Connell that dis-

tional security program. So | CAB slapped on secret classifi- | cation. « | Program may involve as much as a billion dollars. It started in {1940 under Army Air Force Air {Transport Command; is said to |include substantial sum sg for imaintenance and expansion an-

going would be atime the Czech envoy Hjiri Tau-

World Report—

Soviet Expected To Use Guerrillas

Compiled From the Wire Services Twenty-four hours of rapid-fire events . today have turned .the Soviet-Yugoslav war of insults into something perilously near to undeclared war.

are an overture to an attempt at Tito’s assassination by the Stalinist fifth column within Yugoslavia or a herald of Soviet invasion by Russia's seven — according to Yugoslav reports—divisions on the eastern frontier is still anybody's guess. The tendency among European observers was to consider that the Soviets will turn loose guerrilla movements .on the frontiers and defer the act of invasion which would mean formal war. Yugoslavia is thus cast for the scene of a leeching operation, like Greece. Sinister Aspect What lends a sinister aspect to today's situation is not the Soviet’s denunciation of its friendship treaty, which was long overdue, but the general evacuation of the Yugqglav capital by Russian and satellite diplomats. -Even this situation is still ambiguous because the Soviet post was already vacant due to Anatole Lavrentiev’s recall to Moscow for promotion at the same

fer got a similar elevation in the Czech capital's house-cleaning of bourgeois elements in the foreign office: Bulgarian Ambassador Pelo Polowsky was already discreetly extending his leave in the Bulgarian capital, and the Pole, Jan Wende, was gone, too. Going to Get Worse All this conspicuous absenteeism preceded the week's mutual duel of expulsions between Hungary and Yugoslavia and keynoted the feeling among Red diplomats that things were going to get worse before they got better. Tito has become more dangerous to Stalin this past ‘week through new propaganda technique which threatens to make the Kremlin rue the day it ever decided to wash the Communist linen publicly in Hungary's Rajk treason trial.

Ww. ASHINGTON, D.

The disclosure came

former Ambassador to

service.

in an article by Joseph

C. Grew, former Undersecretary of State and

Japan, published in the

latest number of the Foreign Service Journal, house organ of the American career diplomatic

Mr. Grew is chairman of the board of the com-

mittee. Other. officers Eisenhower, James A.

Taft. The committee calls mittee for Free Europe.”

logical warfare against Grew writes. this fall. It will help support

propaganda in their home

see that there are then

Copyright, 1949, by the Indianapolis

the election with a purely negative platform and with nothing of any real interest to offer the mass of the electorate. The debate on devaluation has shown that they do not even have a convincing plan for restoring the economy of the country. “It will be like a contest for the privilege of trying to take a bunch of bananas away from a bull gorilla,” a British political reporter recently remarked over a pint of beer. “Whoever wins

This technique is simply to re veal publitly what traitorously| anti-Stalinist statements have

Hungarian and: Bulgarian Com-| munist leaders whom Moscow| considers loyal. For example, Matias Rakosi, leading “loyal” Communist in Hungary is quoted in Belgrade as having said that “Soviet Russia has skinned“Hungary four times already,” this remark being made in a plea for easier reparations terms.

'nually in addition to original construction. =

Farm Plan Faces Test

Urgent Necessity | - Similarly the Bulgarian old[liner, George Dimitrov, is repre-| .|sented—as even Moscow cannot {deny—as promoting a Balkan

DEMOCRATIC Brannan Farm union independent of the Soviet i Plan will get its first test at the

voke. When his envoys are safe-

Congressmen have been assured po; jn North Dakota's Republi- ly home Tito may reveal the

our atomic stockpile will be good! a thousand years from now if not, exploded or diverted to other uses. But some of them aren’t happy about Commerce Department action licensing for export to Russia 40 electric blast hole drillers. They argue drillers can be used to get uranium out of the ground. Commerce Department says drillers

“have. no. -significance. -to-—the

security of the country.” 8 lpg

A Top Secret

CIVIL AERONAUTICS Board has classified details of its Pan American airport development program top secret at request of Defense Department. Housing Expediter Tighe Woods is stepping up rent decontrol, is trying for goal of 40 decontrols a week. Under mew policy, decontrol of towns with less than 25,000 population is automatic unless local citizens show extraordinary need for controls, Gov. Frank Carlson of Kansas will try to unseat Sen. Clyde Reed in Kansas GOP primary next year, to’. word here. Ex-Gov. Payne Ratner also Ine owe in. Faced with a toug! t, 78-year-old Reed decide not © ng ny

GOP Sen. “Milton "Young is up for re-election. He's a bitter foe of ‘Brannan Plan. So Farmers’ Union, strong in North Dakota, will put a pro-Brannan Plan candidate into the against him. It may be Glenn J. Talbott, president of Farmers Union in oung says he wed comes the lest,

can primaries next June. 8 =

Lobbying Againil Canal

NEW JOB TAKEN on by former Sen. Joe Ball—as vice president of Association of American Shipowners—means he’ll” be lobbying against plans of Panama rditch pay its own way. Brig. Gen. F. K. Newcomer, who runs the canal, wants to increase tolls as much as law will allow. Ball's outfit arg-ies canal is a defense instrument; that since aircraft industry doesn't pay for $ U. 8. airfields, : ship owners Mr Bal should not pay full cost of upkeep of canal. . They say higher tolls will further cut volume of intercoastal shipping. House Merchant Marine Committee got into the fight with a request to President Truman that he prevent any increase in tolls until whole canal zone administration is revamped. Congressmen just back from Britain predict Aneurin Bevan will be next prime minister of that country. They say he's rising fast in Labor Party, has firm hold on left-of-center wo groups. He's minister of health now, was one of leading debaters in commons

this week when devaluation

Canal governor to make the big|”

Zhdanov-Malenkov duel in the cominform. . Moscow is, therefore, confronted with the urgent necessity of stopping Tito’s mouth before the lentire world comes to know what invisible tensions are working behind the Iron Curtain and before the west is given the opportunity to expion them. . Rm

Great Britain

BARRING a miracle before it takes place, the next British general election today promised to be just about as lop-sided as one of those heavyweight

The great illusion that this election will be a knock-down; drag-

I lout, nip-and-tuck battle between

Socialism and Capitalism is due largely to wishful thinking on the part of the Conservatives and the personal brilliance and popularity of Winston Churchill. In actual fact the odds in favor of a Socialist victory are so great that you could go from Land’s End to John O'Groats waving a

finding anybody who would bet one to 10 on the Conservatives. For all their mistakes the Socialists are as popular today as

four years of Franklin D. Roose-,

same reason, to wit: They have made a desperate effort to live up to their election promises and have given something to practically every voter in the realm. The Conservatives will go into

a

been made in private to Tito by

cc

boxing! matches in which “Faintin’ Phil”| Scott used to bore the customers. !

sheaf of 5-pound notes without]

the New Deal was after the first | velt's presidency, -and for the,

“ithe election is going to wish he

| hadn’t.” . = =

France PREMIER Henri Queuille last

compromise solution to nationwide labor demands for higher wages because of franc devaluation. The ministers were in session for six hours. At the same time, the cabinet called for’ a European economic conference to iron out the continental monetary and economic) problems resulting from devaluation. The acceptance of Mr. Queuille’s formula by the cabinet, which had

|20-day-old government, the long-| |est in office since 1937, would fall.

almost daily since devaluation.

i

night won cabinet approval of his;

been split for two weeks, ended|four years. the threat that his one year and: y s =

The ministers have been meeting!

The compromise rejected wage|as the result of legislation passed

Replacing Six Important Parts

include Gen. Dwight D. Farley, William Green,

James B. Carey, Matthew Woll, Spyros P. Skouras, William L. Clayton, A. A.

Berle Jr. and Charles P.

itself the “National Com-

It will wage political, economic and psycho-

Communist regimes, Mr.

It plans a fund raising campaign

anti-Communist exiles in

the United States and will aid them to engage in

countries.

“The Iron Curtain is bound one day to disintegrate,” Mr. Grew writes. ment comes, democracy is to spread again, we must

“If, when that mo-

alive and at work strong

men and women from the Eastern Europe, proven leaders animated by the democratic fai Secretary of State Dean Acheson ¢has given his official blessing to the committee.

h.”

Times and Chicago Daily News, Inc.

increases until the effects-of devaluation could be ascertained. E = ”

Norway

FOR four years the Labor government of Norway has pursued a firm policy of state control of wages and prices without attempting the nationalization of big industry. On Oct. 10 the people of Norway will go to the polls to decide whether they want this economic policy continued. All political parties were enthusiastically campaigning today for parliamentary victory, equally sure of gaining votes—the Communist excepted. The latter, weakened by rivalry between its bosses, is generally expected to suffer a drastic reduction in its parliamentary seats (from 11 to 3 or 4). Party views on domestic matters have never been at so much variance as they are today. But foreign policy including Western orientation and sponsorship of the Atlantic Pact is unanimously supported—Communists excepted, of course. Political prognosticators are agreed at the moment that the voters will return a “yes,” on Oct. {10, for status quo in the gothing!

Argentine HIGHER taxes became effective for many Argentines today

INDIANAPOLIS PoLice

Our Fair City—

Satellites Quit Yugoslav Capital

by congress before it adjourned its regular session Friday night. Income tax rates were increased by 20 per cent, except those on incomes earned by personal work, such as salaries and wages. Higher excise taxes also became effective on beer, cider, wines, matches, toilet articles, silks and “luxury” articles. The profit tax on real estate operations was raised to 40 per cent when less than one year has elapsed betwee nthe purchase and sale of a property. After a year elpses, the tax will be only 20 per cent. The increase was passed to discourage real estate speculation. Meanwhile, Argentina devalued its monetary unit, the peso, terms of both dollars and pounds sterling.

in relation to either but new mul-tiple-rate schedules

rates also will be applied to varfous import and export categories. The new rates will become effective on Monday. Many of the existing rates remained unchanged.

India

Indian Prime Minister Jawa-

in| -

No single percentage was set|

were an-|° nounced, with a separate set for| imports and exports. Different| &

Tito's Duel of Insults With Russ Expected to Get Worse ‘Sharp’ Salesmen Find Though it Skims Perilously Close to Undeclared War

Home Base for the Free to _The Times . C., Oct. 1—A committee of leading private American citizens today prepared to launch a “cold war” of its own against Russia to back up the government's official cold-war effort, it was revealed here today. =

Public Growing Wise To Their Empty Deals

Better Business Burea

Complaints Here Have Decreased

Better Business Bureau

door-to-door salesmen peddling orders for merchandise they don’t deliver have decreased. Bureau believes itinerants have given up trying here. One reason is widespread publicity given complaints and warnings to check salesmen before giving down payments on magazine subscriptions, other merchandise, according to :

Bureau. Another may be upswing Number of veterans selling d

to 0 play on sympathy for “old buddies has hit zero in recent Waeka,

With 5 genetal — up of money, gross take of gambling : fraternity is reported 'way down. “Five dollar-chip” players in dice Joints now playing $1. Gambling casinos in Kentucky across river from Cincinnati competing with each other for suckers’ dollars by offering top New York and Chicago entertainment. Bingo off,

bookies’ bets being ut in half.

harlal Nehru warned the world today it should worry more about the “psychology of blind fear” than Russia’s acquisition of the atomic bomb. In an exclusive interview with the United Press on the eve of his departure for the United States, Mr. Nehru predicted that Russia’s discovery of the atomic bomb “may help toward prevention of war.” “The more terrible the dangers of war, the more the people should see the folly of it and avoid it,” he said. Mr. Nehru will leave New Delhi next Thursday for the United States on what he calls a “good will” mission. #

China

Red armies in the Yangtze Valley, comprising the bulk of Communist frontline strength, were reported today to have undergone|P° ‘extensive retraining and reorgani-|) zation. Revamping the Communist military machine, including a reshuffle of some of the top Red

for another major series of offensives such as the Red armies unleashed a year ago in Manchuria and North China. The Chinese Communists for-

Peoples Republic” yesterday at a mammoth celebration in Peiping and named Chou En-lai as premier. Mao Tze-tung, head of the Chinese Communists since they broke with Chiang Kai-shek 21 years ago and president of the | Pro-Soviet government, issued the’ proclamation. Mr. Chou, well-known to many Americans, was chief Communist negotiator during the unsuecessfull efforts of Gen. George C. Marshall to form a coalition government and avert a civil war.

Global Notes

The Israeli are about to launch all-out political and psychological warfare against internationalization of Jerusalem as proposed by the United Nations. Newspapers in Israel are already calling advocates of the UN plan “men whose hands are imbued with blood and oil.” A strong campaign will be fought in the United States, too, against the United Nations proposals. One argument which will be used is a claim that the great

largely because they think that will enable them to interfere in the internal affairs of Israel and the Arab States, and play them off against each other.

® = » THE U. 8. is urging Athens to adopt a policy of reconciliation toward the Greek rebels, now that the Greek civil war seems definitely to have turned the corner toward peace. . » ” THE Shah of Iran, soon to come to the United States, still plays the role of a modern Arabian Nights prince. He goes around donations for

poor villages to {wells and thus escape from the ter-dominating landlords,

commanders, may set the stage|;

mally proclaimed a new “Chinese|

powers favor internationalization|

Easy Way fo Win

IN ADDITION, football card operators took it on the nose first IWS rehs 3 Susrent season by andicapping wrong, thereby almost giving customers re Bounding Rumors break or better in some cases. But

v Says

reports complaints against

in employment. oor-to-door in scraps of uniforms

{worry none, pool operators know better now strength of football teams and you'll probably not win as sasfly again, :

PUBLISHED rumor Harry Reid

England Gets New Type Wind Tunnel

Air Ejector Replaces ‘Closed Circuit’

By Science LONDOR, "Sept, 20. Something new in wind tunnels for aviation research has been revealed here. It is a “straight-through” tunnel, powered with a standard turbojet engine widely used in airplanes. It is a development of the English Electric Co. The engine is installed at the terminal end of the tunnel, and acts as an air injector, The workIg air current in the test section of the tunnel is due to the suction of the ejector. Most wind tunnels employ the “closed-cir-cuit” principle in which air is forced around and around the endless tunnel by means of powerful compressors. This new tunnel is straight. The air is not reused. It is sucked into the forward end and discharged into the atmosphere at the rear. The engine employed is a Rolls-|

thrust of 5000 pounds is housed in a nacelle carried in| a bulge of the tunnel.

and the other wall through which jet.

can be obtained.

jet engine.

Indo-China.

Chinese Communists.

Royce Nene, which haa 2 Nene Won't have to buy matches much

A space] is left between the inner nacelle

two-thirds of the tunnel air is|serious threat of swine brucellosis, drawn by the ejector action of the disease of livestock, The remaining one-third of There is no known treatment for the air is drawn direct into the!it and it is transmissible to huengine. When no model is in the mans as well as animals, accord- ’ working section, a rate of airflow] {ing to Indiana Veterinary Medical nine-tenths the speed of sound| The English Electric Co. is now working on a wind tunnel to give much greater speeds, using no more power than that available from a Nene turbo-

THE U. S. and * Britain will urge France to make further con- * = = cessions to the emperor Bao Dai in order to build him up as a coffee in next few months. They champion of native nationalism in If the French do this, Washington and London will urge other Asiatic overnments to rally more enthusiastically to Bao Dai’s support against the Indo-

” - o FRANCO'S invitation to King Abdullah to visit Spain is part of a campaign by Madrid to win

Sr, Indianapolis Railways president, is about to resign had utility : chief glued to telephone late last week denying it. Last time rumor got around, it was based on tip from radio com-

New rumor sp from press stating Mr. Reid senior is - up

will leave his bounding buses trundling trolleys. He just wanted an enterprise he could retire to in old age, said Mr. Reid. The veteran transit executive did not say when he expects old age to set in for him. He will be 70 next Dec. 31. « = =»

Match Supply THERE'S at least one Republican who didn’t lose everything in the last election.

reau of Motor Vehicles, salvaged something’ like four full cases of book matches with his picture on - one side and on the other the banner: “H. Dale Brown for Treasurer of State.” : {| Contents of the salvaged cases, . {Mr. Brown estimates, were 20,000 books of matches. He figures he -

{before the campaign of 1956.

Swine Disease : | HOOSIER veterinarians report

in state. |

Association. Veterinarians advise swine raisers to adopt new control program now. It includes blood-test-ing animals more than two months old, eliminating infected animals, disinfecting pens. This appears to be only known method that works; veterinarians say.

Coffeemen say price rise in

warn, too, coffee may become scarce next year. Talk in trade

is U.S. supplies are being purchased abroad.

# ” Happy Find MORE and more motorists are discovering that traffic signals on E. New York St. are synchronised . at 40 miles per hour.

s 8 & friends and influence people . . 88 aE Arab Jie have as throughout the Arab world. Anti-Jam Boys quired new arms and ammunition| ‘ since the lifting of the United Na- ’ HSE ITE denials jem ORY tions arms blockade. h She Nuff : To ig Iistans =

WASHINGTON, Oct. ‘1 (UP) — President Truman today sent. ‘hearty wishes” to. Maharajdhiraja Tribhubana Bir Bickram * Jung Bahadur Shah Bahadur Shum Shaire Jung Deva on Vijayadashami Day in Katmandu. Another way of saying it

is that Mr. con- [stalled on trial basis, the present atulated, the king of ones are here to stay. Indianapolis people on [meters should average $200 a : their national holiday. or s year. a day,

C-