Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 15 February 1950 — Page 3
dicted that ed construce dwellings force prices 7 to conde elter is still the nation
alistic view
‘prevention of directly or indirectly would unite
- or her allies, the pact said, the
these three parts:
WEDNESDAY, FEB. 15, 1850 _
Provides for Ban
On Jap Aggression ||
Manual Students Present *
MOSCOW, Feb. 15 (UP)—A 30-|
year treaty of alliance between
Russia and Communist China was hailed by the Soviet press today. . The importance attached to it was made plain by the lavish display given to it in the newspapers, Stories and pictures on the event took up the first two pages of all’
newspapers. The three section treaty was ane nounced early today. It climaxed the negotiations which began Pec. 16 when Mao Tze-tung, Chinese Communist leader, arrived in Moscow soon after his armies had completed a sweep through China. The treaty provided for the aggression by Japan “or any other state wilich
with Japan in acts of aggres-' sion.” | Should either Russia or Communist China find itself at war as a result of attacks by Japan
other would “immediately render military or other aid with all the means at its disposal.” . Doesn't Mention U. 8. (The treaty did not mention the United States or Great Britain by name. They, with Nationalist| China and Russia, are the occupying powers in. Japan.) The treaty was divided into
ship and alliance.
Changchun. Railway in Man-
churia, Port Arthur and Dhrien. | aq 4 abrogated the Soviet- = ~The Manchurian railroad, ROW chinese treaty of 1945. Both govunder joint control would be re-'.nments recognized the inde-{return to China, not later than
turned to China and Soviet troops would be withdrawn from Port,
— Arthur after a Japanese peace treaty is signed or +iot later than: — 3952. Sh
In event of aggression, Port Arthur would be used as a joint naval base. Consideration of the status of Darien was postponed
until a Japanese treaty is signed.
THREE: An agreement on the extension of commerical and economic aid to China. It provided that Russia would aid China to
‘.culated on a basis of 35 Amer-|“jokers” today in a new BSino-
~~ ONE: A commitment of friend- {can dollars to one ounce of finé|goviet treaty in which Russia os- U. S. Strengthens Enemies, ; Grows Weaker, Jenner Says
gold. The credits would be exAgreem .nt on the tended over a five-year period.
Beverly Willson (left), Barbara Black and Patricia Tollan swing inte their act from "Kactus Kow- " a five-act all.school vaudeville show to be presented tomorrow and Friday at Manual Train. ing High School.
Kactus Kowboys’ Tomorrow And Friday
—
Louise Hendricks interprets "After the Show," from "Kactus Kowboys." :
PAGE 3
Methodists Win
162 Members
‘Each One Win One
Drive Is Success
A total of 782 persons will join Methodist Churches as a re{sult of the first day of an in|tensive evangelistic campaign. in progress this week in the Indianapolis Methodist District. ‘ie The campaign, which includes #8 [both visits into home and revival 8 [services, began Sunday night and : hii eclase Thursday. It is bheling conducted in preparation for 3 | urther evangelistic effort during | Lent. Fifty-four churches of this community are taking part in the campaign, A total of 957 visitors - made 211 calls Monday, the first - {night of the campaign. They ems {ploy the slogan: “Each One Win |One.” Their effort is called the | “Methodist Lenten Advance for {Christ and His Church.” | The Methodists announce with emphasis that they will urge per= sons fallen away from other churches to reunite with their {own denominations. To proselyte - | members of other denominations Is not their purpose, they ex= plained. :
U.S. Set to Talk To Russ Inside UN
Louise Meibohm effectively ignores pleadings of C. D. Brooks during Manual's production. Prizes will be awarded for best performances.
tensibly agreed to release its stranglehold on Manchuria. Broadcasts from Peking and Moscow - said Russia agreed to
The announcement of the treaty
By ROBERT BLOEM Times Politics Editor
America strengthens ' its enlemies abroad and grows steadily weaker at home, Sen. William E.
pendence of Outer Mongolia. 1952, full control of the ManThe 1945 treaty provided for|churian Jaiiroads pd of the joint ownership and administra-|warm water ports of Dairen an tion of the Chinese Changchun | Port Arthur. Jebner charged last night. 5 railway connecting ~lower Man-|- Officials here were inclined to Ve are worse off today than churla with Vladivostok, made View this section of the pact as|We Were before Pearl Harbor, Darien a free port under a Rus-/8 propaganda move rather than he told Marion County Republicsian harbor master, and made|2ny real intent on the part of the ans at a Lincoln Day dinner. He Port Arthur a joint naval base, |Soviet Union to pull out. said this was the unanimous view . . Chinese Nationalists here put|{of men charged with U. 8. deU. 5. Seeks ‘Jokers it down as “pure propaganda.” |fense at every outpost he visited i R ed Chi Pact Russia had obtained control of on his recent world tour. n - ina a the ports and railroads for 30 He charged the Truman ad‘WASHINGTON, Feb. 15 (UP)|years under a 1945 treaty with ministration with playing “Len.iin's game,” and spending the na-
the extent of $300 million, cal-{— U. 8. officials looked for|/the Chinese Nationalists.
Here's why we say 1950 White Crown is the
| Best winter gas You can buy/
Standard’s answer to winter's cold!
And what an answer it is—a new and better White Crown Gasoline packed to the limit with faststarting molecules that were saved all last summer in huge refrigerated tanks to bring you faster starting this winter. :
Not just a so-called “stepped-up” gasoline . . . but a new-formula gas . : . made to give you more reliable winter operation than you've ever known before. That's the White Crown your Standard Oil Dealer is serving up today! It gives you:
Cre-second starting! _ You'll feel confident your engine will start “7 + ...start surely ... start with a rush! And -youllalso get... ..
= [9K taster warm-up / Yes, 199 faster than the premium gasolines or in general use last winter. So you start and * get going without a lot of sputtering, stalling and battery strain. And your engine = + | gives you all the knock-free power it can possibly deliver. = oe Get the “feel” of this new and better STANDARD WHITE CROWN Gasoline —to- ~ day!—at your neighborhood Standard Oil Dealer's! Le
si = 4
il lousy with Communists, and Sec-
|Set Fire to Houses
tion “into bankruptcy.” He sald getting “the worst double cross in history” from a so-called “lib. eral party” that gives old age pensioners “twenty-one lousy dollars a month to live on.” Cites Soviet Expansion Under the guise of a cold war against world communism the government “squanders” billions
said. At the end of World War II,
it governs 800 million.
Truman to "Wage Active Campaign |
Lawrence, mayor of Pittsburgh would wage as aggressive a fight | and a Democratic National Com- to elect a Democratic Congress | I ia } mittee that the United Nations publisher of the Erie (Pa.) Dis-|self elected in 1948." { patch-Herald and a Toledo (0.)} of American dollars, Sen. Jenner|attorney.
he said, Russian communism gov-|the President to stump Pennsylerned 180 million people. Today |vania and Ohio,
(Continued From Page One)
oy .nees are chosen he will compaign the part of the Soviet Union to WASHINGTON, Feb, 15 (UP), 8 are chosen he will compaign find common points of contact
~-President Truman, according to aggressively in Pennsylvania and | with the rest.” political associates, sald today Ohio to elect a Democratic, prothat he will campaign in behalf gressive Congress" Mr. American - laboring people arei,, , pemocratic Congress this said. ; fall as aggressively as he fought Mr. for his own election in 1948.
“The door to negotiation is Lamb always open on our side,” Mn - | Rusk said. “It has been said that . , {the United Nations itself is a with Mayor Law-1, .e of a thousand doors. And * rence standing by, told reporters iy ve remain the ordinary chan= Mr. Truman met with David L.{that Mr. Truman also “sald helpels of diplomacy.”
Mr. Rusk reminded the
Lamb,
come and Edward Lamb, this fall as he waged to get him-| oo ter itself is: our -basic overs Mr. Lamb said Mr. Truman|8!! agreement with the Soviet promised to “lay out the Demo- | Union. ’ Mr, Lamb said he had asked cratic platform.” Tomorow night| ‘We do not need another overwhen he speaks at the $100-a-|all agreement” he sald. “We plate Jefferson-Jackson Day din-|need performance on the ones , ner here. we already have.”
“He said that after the nomi-
“We'll all get ulcers before we can get even with that kind of a program,” he said. Meanwhile, he added, President Truman and the State Department are “continuing the treasonable practice of protecting traitors (Alger Hiss).” : He sald Congress was denied use of the FBI files to find out “who is Communist and who isn't.” ; cw “Washington,” he said, .“is retary of State Dean Acheson is playing right into their hands.” Confusion i» Capital He said he could not tell, any more, what is going on In the national capital because “it’s as confused as a little boy who has lost his bubble gum in a hen house.” Sen. Jenner attacked a statement by Senate Majority Leader Scott Lucas (D. Ill.) that “the American people have more liberties today than at any other period in our history.” He listed 10 “rights” the nation's citizens have lost and at the same time backhanded leaders of his own party for letting the Lucas statement go unchalI¢nged. The rights Sen. Jenner listed were: ONE: The right to the confidence of their own government
down “the one-way road to despotism.” TWO: ° The right to know what is going on instead of “blindly groping in the black confusion of outrageous secret diplomacy.” THREE: The constitutional power of impeachment of traitors. FOUR: The right to register opposition to the foreign policies of the party in power; lost because of the “outrageous fraud” of bi-partisan foreign policies. Betrayal at Yalta FIVE: The freedom to look the world in the face as champions and defenders of our tradltional American principles. At Yalta, Tehran and Potsdam, he said, “our own representatives be-itrayed-us-and -sold-hundreds. of
the hands of tyranny.” 2 SIX: The right to control the ings and self denials as a free people. SEVEN: The right to protect their own standard of living. The
through tariffs to whip-into political line every segment of agticulture,” mining, industry, ship-
this power to call in or force ou foreign competition, the President can break any of these industries at will, Sen. Jenner said. . EIGHT: Right to control their own domestic resources. NINE: Freedom from involuntary servitude. Millions of employers, he said, are acting as tax collectors under the withholding tax scheme “without which this monstrous bureaucracy would collapse.” . TEN: The right to stand up for “America first” without being smeared and slandered.
Roomers Want Heat;
MILWAUKEE, Wis., Feb. 15 (UP) — A 22-year-old janitor's helper was charged today with setting fire to two rooming houses because the occupants {“hounded me for too much heat.” Authorities filed two © arson warrants against Frederick |Fierke. Police said he admitted setting one fire Déc. 4 and another last Sunday. ..
millions of helpless humans into 7
uses of their own earnings, sav-|
President, he said, has the power]
ping, fishing and lumbering. with anh
STRAUSS
SAYS: TRADITION WITH A TOUCH OF TOMORROW! : GENTLEMEN: WE GIVE YOU THE WITHOUT LINING $ (The extra lining—whenever the spivit or weather moves you to buy it—is 12.50 extra) There are a lot of men who just don't consider themselves as having a separate lining coat—unless it's a Season Skipper! : It is first of all—a fine topcoat—made by one of the most i experienced and most capable topcoat houses in America—the | ‘name is C. B. SHANE. It's the house that developed the Granddaddy of all removable lining coats—the name is Season Skippets The lining—buttons in and out just like that!— makes a soft, yielding junction—without visible means (the buttons fasten to an invisible fly). : A fine Gabardine—and a fine Topcoat—and at the : » ' “risk of being to and-y—AND a fine VALUE. : 65 dh : : > . (The lining (with sleeves) is 12.50 ’ ai
extra. You can buy it when you want it)
~L. STRAUSS & C0, ue.
be 5 THE MAN'S STORE : wg ;
