Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 18 April 1950 — Page 14

The Indianapolis Times

LOBBYING . . . By James Daniel

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All Dressed Up and No Place to Go

Hoosier Forum

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{ ; 3 | 1d 5 : Z Today | A SCRIPPS-HOWARD NEWSPAPER =. laxpayers | Ai 3% : ; emit a dad lo Yoo Sasth you. sia due your sgit-18 wn. A.

ke , HOWARD WALTER LECKRONE : PO jody Editor Business: Manager

HENRY 'W. MANZ'

More Bad Advice

Big GOP Decision

Red Purge in China

PAGE 14 Tuesday, Apr 18, 1950 - Franking Privilege Used 3 ny in E Boa tool is looking at politics and For 5 aX. AP. : . 11 - t : ' = —— : - Against Anti-Red Bill he ia Just as disgusted ax the editors and com Pa Publish. 2 mentators at the urn | tae ytd pullished daily by Indisnepolis Times Publish; WASHINGTON, Apr. 18—Taxpayers are ho has risked his lite for his country J United Press, Beripps-Howard Newspaper Alliance, NEA Serv- giving financial aid to a propaganda fight being can't feel good sitting back and watching his vl jce and Audit Bureau of Circulations ‘waged here to defeat the Mundt bill. a ty his entry ked. Price in Marion County, 5 cents a copy for daily and 10¢ This is the bill which would require the Com- B; for Sunday: deliverec by carrier daily and Bu y. 38¢ & . But how can the veterans make their . seek daily only ec. Sunday only. 10c. Sail rates in indians munist Party and organizations designated as teit to clean up politics and make this MR ~g4ii3 and sun vo 4 Raina” D Be oattsaione. JCAnAdS and its affiliates to disclose their membership to a a Detter nation in which to live? Shall the ever-dar , Mexico, daily $1.10 a month. Sunday, 10¢ a copy federal board. The bill has been passed by the veterans continue to allow their organizations didn Telephone RIley 5551 House and is pending in the Senate. to be used by the political machines for the ad- family tb The taxpayers’ subsidy to the fight against t of the political machines? Or shall Yea 'o v ; SP vancemen Rive Tine an Ae Pennie Will Pina Thow Awe Wou the bill. comes about because Sen. William ya veterans take the offensive through their elie. A " . Langer (R. N. D.) has lent the use of his con- organizations and use the political machines to : i M t Pl d : gressional frank to an organization fighting the obtain better candidates, better politics and bet- wad of We us ea bill. ter government? . But n . : : The organization is the. so-called National Here in Montgomery County, and I believe HE butter-making industry is appealing for public _. 50 Defeat the Mundt Bill. It calls the same is true elsewhere, the same hoy faces Jt one : : t the Agriculture Depart- itself “a temporary co-ordinating center to de- and the same old cliques are running politi- our-cou support in a campaign to get the Agri % down feat the Mundt bill in any form.” It was inactive cal machines that ran them before the war, of the © ment and Congress to let butter prices com . for several months but recently received a heavy . Any veteran looking at the list of Repub- i Hasta This could only happen under our absurd system of intusion of funds from an undisclosed source. : “@ ean “candidates -in- Montgomery County can’t yal supporting farm. prices-—the..spe nment_ not to Familiar Pattern lost. The worst part is that evervope kSovs are p bigh——Pp C$ d everyone on the ‘street tells, and offe 0 3 : ALTHOUGH many clearly non-Communist an t th od chopped, : . X e¢ glad-handers mention guarantee them so much for their product oH individuals and groups are opposed to the bill, st big. you hat ie glu: thers pared put But that's the picture. Officials of the American generally on the ground that it would provide There ‘ave. several veterans on Ase list he goes t Butter Institute foreseeing stiff competition from tax-free legal machinery whereby “liberal” causes might RET Thier Wh hi | seed 8 tal on the street LABS yellow margarine, say they'd like to sell butter for as b4 harassa, the committee follows a familiar they don't have . chance to win. There is no ple report 1 i : : one working for them. low as 50 cents a pound to stimulate buying. Sales already Its chairman is former Congressman Jerry : OR Te Toul Jer tial Velsiaty' organs bitlion ca —are falling off. Sa ee at. i: O'Connell, Whol Louis Bideas. he relotand izations are sinking to little ete Shan Fic. About 1 : Deparimies ing and gambling places. When there is an About a It can’t be done, says the Agrisulrise Spar cents Communist Party member before the Canwell ag of nuling a a veterans’ organization yer re Under the price-support law, the present floor of 60 Committee in Washington. State. Mr, O'Connell you find little activity on the part of veterans ane in a pound cannot be lowered by much more than 3 cents. brought a libel suit but it was dismissed. —and a great deal of activity on the part of the a He p icv i r i in the Treasurer is Bruce Waybur, who was part glad-handers. The glad-handers even succeed And. iy Moreover, the policy is never to lower price props of the pro-Red leadership In the United Bloc in naming our officers, ming ne middle of a program. In this case, the “program” is to, .\" b.di0 and Machine Workers Union, The Velerand organitations aie al the criss: nen, run through March, 1951. . which pulled out of the CIO ahead of the CIO roads. If they are to maintain their.member- Now thi ¥ wow *Tn a purge of Communist-led member unions. ship and their prestige they must clean up and grown-ups , it and The piece of mail which the committee is take an active part in the post-war battle for junior's cs : 50 the Butter Institute feels pretty Ded Rho 4 sending out under Sen. Langer's frank is a democracy. Otherwise they will be considered J is saying that “if people dont shan pleading pe x Row: speech Mr. Langer made in the Senate on Mar, ot © as suly gambling and Noor. Sens’ saing. ihe 2 In ill ever be done, and the government will keep 10. He was the only member of the Judiciary ‘ prestige of the veterans cause to ax exemp at pre-c nothing Wile : ”" 8 Committee who voted against a favorabl report ~ — Tg and to exercise extra Privilege. for thicke on piling up mountains of butter. Lee WN 8 e repo 4 nab re’ : ices come down 4 - : . at loav Though we'd like to see butter pric . , 2 BRANNAN’S “Time for a Change’ mat oy we'd rather see public pleas directed against the whole Speech in Senate LBUR PANTS By Edward F. Maddox, City \ They « price-support program. Meanwhile the butter industry EMPLOYEES of the national committee ra a Here are some straws in the wind which turn it int i i fighting the bill say the speech was prepared as : . . : President Trum and Congress had better Which | might do well to follow the advice of an Agriculture : 1 . residen aman g .Department official and put on a butter selling campaign RISANATAY Teper ag the Pilg 2 pier WHITE HOUSE STRATEGY . . . By Marquis Childs heed. i eh —: shooting i i - y : * . First, Mr. Truman and Congressmen ha ) to increase consumption. If it would work as hard to port, they say Mr. Langer made the speech on as Bi : Veto Irks’ Politicos itr Teuwan and Jongresy ih Rad peut Co - : : ney sell butter as it did to keep margarine under an unfair the floor policy of do nothing in China handed China to If the a : : : Since then, with the use of easily obtainable : } } ein the Communists. “have toi competitive handicap, it might get better results in a government... printing. ..ofice--repririts and Mr. WASHINGTON. Apr. 18-=-At a recent dinner . presidential-or-at-least-a vice presidential nomi- Second, and more Iiportant to Gur own Week and 1auch better cause. ‘ ~Langer's—postage-free dfcial envelopes, they party a group of Senators were discussing the Ration in the future, Sécted In the smide Dational security and defense, the Acheson do D er say they mailed 10,000 copies of the speech to Kerr natural gas bill and what President Tru- The resentment was reflected in s 1 in Gerinan isarmi the Ger. eo or . elcome individuals -and organizations on their list. man would do about it. One of the ny nn Thich Sen. Harry cas St unap ~ Jude BE en ermaAny garmin the Ger: THES W W I After that, the national committee boints “present offered to bet any sum of money, giving attae ime- Magazine -and- Time’ A < : a 158 HE mes oe de po Te rn HV OUNSF HISHRbATS of on a "odds of ten to one, that the President would sign porter, Frank McNaughton. But in the cloak Jo d8{enge Dewds i3 as gerialy 3 0 get £ BRITISH manufacturers. are holding an automobile show Joined with Mr. Langer in opposition to the bin, the bill. : : rooms in the final days of the Kerr bill debate BIR pon Chis So 1 ui in New York City's Grand Central Palace. Sen. Langer contradicted the national com- ~~ None of the Democrats present was in the it took an even more virulent form. Reds. Indeed, : : 1) : ket f t . Mittee as to the number of his envelopes being least interested in taking him up on the bet. In The opinion was freely expressed that pas- The: Achesdit licy is proved to be ‘sort bf the 'n They hope it will help them: create a market for at t 3000 the group was Sen. Robert 8. Kerr of Oklahoma, sage of the bill would give that smart-aleck ex- Ac pole) p least 50,000 British cars a year in the United States bs S Be ra nar by a Ng en tar of the bill, who beamed with confidence professor from Illinois just what he deserved. toward communism, both at home and abroad going to least ol, * postage-free, and that his secretary, Miss Mary : " Before he enlisted in the Marine Corps as a and no secrecy in the State Department can right into Eighteen thousand Americans attended the show on Twin, Was at the committee office to handle 2! is STAR are probably even more private at the outset of World War II, Sen. hide ‘that fact. Mr. Acheson and President “Hole il 3 its opening day. Among those who commended its purpose 3 ng. : 2 i disappointed by the President's veto than the Douglas was a professor of economics at the Truman may have been led into such a dan- u , J y Make that very plain,” he said. “Nobod 4 hiv ic gerous policy by merely following the British to spray i layed : Y © Texans and Oklahomans who were so bent on University of Chicago. Sp and praised the cars displayed were: gets my frank unless my secretary is with taking the production of natural gas out from inflamed the Wraith Socialist labor policy, but if so, the time has Alrwisk | Paul G. Hoffman, former president of the Studebaker them.” under federal regulation. They had counted on ~ INTIOM e Wra come for a complete change. ' clothespins ini i al . ; CT that the President took Sen. fee table. ‘or inistrator of the European Recave the President's appratal of the measure as their THE FACT Corp, now adm t Farope Byery Purged by Cio hottest campaign issue this fall. Douglas’ viewpoint almost word for word cer-. What Others Sa o Hie, the program. % . THE national gommitfee has offices here at They planted to exploit it to the fullest to tainly helped to inflame the wrath of that i y ide is Alfred P. Sloan Jr., chairman of the General Motors ,, address shared by the United Public Work- Show that the President didn’t really mean jt flammable Texan, Sen. Tom Conually. Shea er I FIRMLY believe that American aid to Sn ns ers, who were booted out of the CIO as when he attacked the “special interests.” Now, Sam Rayburn whose boiling point is almost as Greece had a great deal to do with (Yugoslav 's goi Corp. : e as Com. ; low as that of Sen. Connally, was led to angry } ay He's goil : ‘ munist-led; the local office sof th tallao by his veto, the President has snatched away : . Marshal) Tito's defection from the Kremlin- . Henry Ford II, president of the Ford Motor Co. Punist ea: Ine i ol Be Ea lace) this opportunity to turn the tables on the whis- press tions expressed i private "oh controlled bloc.—Sen. Scott W. Lucas (D.) of fay. nent y ® > . = i i i th these men exercise grea wer, e . Lt BAW py h ' le a f the 'Mittee of the District of Columbia.” He TC roupugner ang Hue. his pretension dot to, they can hold - or i dn Minels. * 2 likestock SOME may think it strange that leaders o There is no published list of members. How- sre peop £. measures essential to government operation. It - : * men from American automobile industry should welcome and applaud ever, the committee has a list of “sponsors.” Signature Predicted was because he knew so well what their reaec- SHOULD this nation . . . be forced to de- edible bull i i 1 i heir d ti ket Among them: tion would be that the President wavered so fend her existence in another world conflagra. over the a a British effort to increase sales in their omestic market. Benjamin J. Davis Jf. one of the 11 Com. LESLIE BIFFLE, secretary of the Senate, long. tion, our past industrial miracles must become It ought It is not strange. For leaders of the American auto- munist Party directors convicted in New York, “ho usually Knows. 3 much as anyone hot One of the strongest factors compelling him Figen. miracl oY . we Survive a ie Soll be ¥ ile indy : i Ab Fl i ] what Is going to happen in Was Th to a veto was the telegram signed by the mayors wn) ) withou mobile indugfry understand the facts of life in world wom axer, president of the United Public predicting that the President would reluctantly \o %% nas Ihe er ye by nen ors sistant secretary of Army. Two ‘K trade. oi Fier}. Foreman, treasurer of the (Wallace) sign. Southern Democrats were counting Rey. urging him to protect consumers. But another ANY CHARGES rd me) of pro-Soviet A RAI / r is a two-way process. the ; lly on what they believed was an understandin important factor was a trenchantly written ’ ° -Sovie +A 1Ls They know that trade i yp Progressives, with the White House to let the bill go through, P2200 from Secretary of Interior Oscar *YMPathies are complete moonshine and pure with an ol people of Britain and other foreign countries are to buy - - Perlow secretary-treasurer of the CI0- A clause had been inserted in the Kerr bill call- Chapman. Mr. Chapman never gave up hope hallucination.~Owen Lattimore, former State a clicking American cars and other American products when the ®XPelled United Furniture Workers Union ing for a continuous study of gas prices and oF President would in the end veto the Department associate. The rail bl n A ; Donald Henderson, admitted Communist who the oil and gas spokesmen had. counted on this bill ) LE BE Barton W Marshall Plan ends, they must be able to. earn MeriCan ‘resigned as president of the Agricultural Work- as an “out” for the President. He Presrlent Las wi Erol Feapeet Yok 3+ A GROUP of world forces dedicated to the B. & O., & dollars. And to earn American dollars they must sell their ers “Jnion and took and appointive office to In his veto message the President took the Chapman's political acumen ever since the secre. ‘enslavement of man opposes our leadership. It... _.. LoCo 86 ~ products in this country avoid the Taft-Hartley non-Communist afidavit, line. of reasoning. advanced. with such. skilland- “tary, Who ‘was then Undersecretary of Interior, i wy thi TT, ni to og so ® clerk in’ M bop PR BER ws ie Aer aa a creer ty fr pipers eee SO POGUIPeMeN Te — persistence on the floor of the Senate -by Sen. served as residential advance man in the 1948 8 erence by force of arms.—Rear The American automobile industry, confident of its Grant’ Oakes, president of the United Farm Paul Douglas of Illinois. This was to the effect wl Chapman was ons of tre ad. Adm C. B. Momsen, . half 3 own efficiency, doesn't demand tariff walls to protect it Equipment Lnlon, also expelled by the CIO. pu he Dioduciion 02 neural gas a ei tn Vvisers who urged the President to show himself EVERYWHERE in W ion 1h 0 roras : “ : an ; ; nd 20 others with ‘close Communist 8 distribution in the large cities of the Nor to as many people as possible at every whistle 4 n Washington there's a toro ork spainst foreign competition. It It a Fer JasiEy connections, Is a monopoly and therefore must be subject to stop that cout be reached in the time available, jecling of fear. Any day you may be called be- er markets for American cars. realizes that its foreign : government regulation in order to protect the L Cost Pow ore a congressional committee to explain why e ! . : ; - : i joes - r you happened t c Schulte wa 0 from consumer from exorbitant prices. ow-Lost Fowe ) ppe 0 pass a Communist in the markets can't be enlarged by barring foreign griods Hf MY NEED The fact that Sen. Douglas led the fight HE HAS had a lot to do with arranging the street.—Former Secretary of Interior Harold MR: SC America, ) against the Kerr measure in some ways compli- Truman trip next month when the President will L. Ickes. ~ c Presi " = =» . “ } x = There 30 much bod iin ask cated the decision that confronted the President 80 to the West Coast to dedicate the dam at . ee oe . IG MR. HOFFMAN, opening the British automobile show, I'd ask for confidence ant grace - when he returned from his Florida vacation. Grand Chie. That trip ili sree the Presi- HIS man (Sen. Joseph McCarthy) is not try- “I well . i y iti . : : , ake ’ And admittedly that decision was one of the. dent's role in he ping to provide low-cost power ing to get Tid of known C : 1 5 sh industries, will make With no- waning, of my . ! : el g own Communists in the State started to expressed hope that other British i dr vy Y wo ani 9 Zeal. most trying the President has had to make dur- to attract new industry to the West. These _ Department; he is hoping against hope that he ddsk you n similar sales efforts here, thus speeding the time when “That T meet every test. Ing his five years in the White House. claims, as Mr. REpman plied on would have will find some. Former, Secretary of State er forget i ies i ) itis et. T wn Sen. Douglas has won such extraordinary sounded very o against the background of Henry L. Stimson. ’ ; American companies can compete in the Brinsh Mari et To hee, OF humor I would beg praise from all quarters that a very human presidential approval of the Kerr bill, ¢ + ow Po neres That is a fine hope. If all’ American industries were Without at re ry Dest. a b jealousy burns in the bosoms of many of his col- But the consequences of the veto can like- I DON'T see how the State Department can this whic] wise enough to share it there would be brighier prospect For then T could ot oan at me leagues. He has been repeatedly hafled as the wise be costly. They may be seen in a further operate in such a climate of hostility, in which a what can f ti d world recoverv and ace after the U. 8 » ) . ug . most promising senatorial freshman in many deterioration of the weak and indifferent leader- miasma of doubt and suspicion surrounds it.— larly in th or continue Je Y: , pe so —Mary R. White, 854 N. Sherman Dr. years, and there have been suggestions of a ship on Capitol Hill. Sen. William Benton (D.) of Connecticut. ' in Indiana government stops giving our friends abroad American - It-deesn ollars with which to buy-American products. : . el ~ . / A . production dolla p POLITICS .. . . By Robert Taylor SIDE GLANCES By Galbraith REGIMEIN Asia . . . By Clyde Farnsworth Accurate d

the telegra

wayside sf . top desk o (WEN LATTIMORE, one of the central figures in the PITTSBURGH. Apr. 18 — Republican voters are going to __TAIPEH, Formosa, Apr. 18—Unquestionable Chinese intel. Our Tov Senate investigation of Communist influences in the fake BIg decision In next month's bitterly fought Pennsylvania ligence from Peking Indicates that Gen. Mao Tse-tung has seized INDIAN } oi : ye n. eadership of the so-called internationalist elements of the Chi. : State Department, how wants the United States to disavow They'll decide whether the party will follow the leadership nese Communist Party and may start liquidating Nationa. Tite-size the Chinese Nationalists so that the Chinese Communists ot S-yearal Joseph R. Grundy, apostle of the high tariff and minded Red officials and generals, fo ae - : 3 yy Lae gt old- . i , : } oo > can replace them in the United Nations organization. oe URS Ref bilcapuam. or i more progressive leadership of of He ey aie 8. blood purge comparable to Stalin's mop-up The C. We should withdraw our recognition of "Chiang pun — “We must defeat the Grundy ; wove toge!

Kai-shek, he says, so that those United Nations members oH WISH tH 8 86 EN Vote "to" inseat the old ‘Chinese: delegation to the United Nations and seat a new one” representing the Communists. Dr. Lattimore, who previously has given this country a lot of bad advice, now seems to be confusing China's membership iri the United Nations and China's seat on

As soon as they get that

ire ttledy he WHE HR Hy UH Rife

out how to beat off a determined bid by Democrats to

capture the state, as they did

once before in an off-vear election :

The Democrats united on a

harmony ticket. for their own

forces in “the spring primar

rome SDEMEtra ts will “defeat CT

them in the fall,” he says. Mr. Duff is Yeeking nomination to the U. 8. Senate against Rep. John C. Kinkel, of Harrisburg. The big show, however, is in the race for governor, -

perts say 20000 officers Of.

“thE Red" atmy perished in the

interests of -ungnimity and greater opportunity for younger men. - u - STALIN. removed the corrosion from his army brass

by replacing old school offi--

sts of the so-called Nation. alist clique, to whom Gen. Mao's “deviation” of 20 years ago always suggested.the possibility of “China first, world revolution second.” this development isn’t good. They've become poor insurance risks.

For..old,. Chinese. Comme: «iw fuss

“with Howa . rr

i cers with comparative young- s = = fog, primary and are watching de- } : ss =» sters from the ranks who were INSIDE information from la the Security Council. ‘ kghtedly from the sidelines as THE Duffs back former Su- more adaptable to making war the Red capital is that Mao's PE * * =» the Republican factions insult perior Court Judge John 8. in new ways with new weap- long visit to Moscow con- + Yi : : . Fine, 57, and the Grundys sup- ons. That bloodletti 1 inced hi hat Sink 2 \ NALIST China, even on its restricted bases Ach other Bh und) p tting plus vinced him that Sinkiang and z NATIONALIST Ch na, e cted Se ) «ew port Jay Cobke, 52 ‘war vet. American lendlease, say some Tibet, neither populated pre. =~ jon Formosa and Hainan, still has a larger population: p 3PLITS in the Republican eran who lost an eye in the Russian experts, spelled the dominately by racial Chinese, “than 23 of the nations which are members of the United Cory re ay Ra hattie of wy Lo. Mr. Cooke, a differerice’ between defeat and need .Russia for their devel. ’ vi 3 . 8 e r adelphian, is’ a direct de- victory in the war with Ger- A Nations General Assembly. The government on Formosa holds a lead of almost a mil- gcendant of the financier who ay ¥ rot pe, Manchuria os certainly could meet any other test of membership under 4on in yae Fegtsiyationa. helped President Lincoln $- Emergence of Gen. Mao as ternative there was between San : : 4 y 18 one, however. is er nance the Civil War, the most international of Russi | : s : ; | . ussian domination or inter. ’ (which such countries as, Haiti, \ enezuela, Paraguay, ent. It's a bitter, show-down Thus far, the issues have China's Red internationalists Rainy Panama and the Dominican Republic have qualified. split which forces a referen-

Permanent seats on the Security Council were reserved for certain great powers, of which China was expected

dum on Grundyism or a moderate kind of Republicanism. There's a good deal of per.

been reaction and rackets. Grundy forces charge the DuffFine ticket with getting support of corrupt local machines.

after his long visit to Moscow confifms the gravitation of

" Red China into the Soviet or-

nationalization, perhaps under the United Nations. . For that reason he preferred Russia . in Manchuria.

: : : bit, assures its active alliance Havin laid, down these to ®e one, an assumption which had acceptance in 1945. Sona) Aunosny Dewees He The. Duffs hotly deny the in the event of a third world precutu Mao is sats 3 Today there are two Chinas. But if Nationalist China has _rundys and the Du charges. war and may, as it develops,

Jost its position as one of the great powers, it ‘does not follow that Communist China has succeeded to that

‘position. :

~ ” THERE is nothing to prevent Communist China from applying for membership in the United Nations General Assembly. But a period of probation there certainly would seem in order before a newcomer of this kind is moved to

first broke out in the 1948 national convention, when the

Grundy forces went for Thom-

as E. Dewey and Gov. Duff héaded the anti-Dewey forces.

» - LJ THE Grundys now are trying to hand the tag of New Dealism- on Mr. Duff. They were elated when President Truman invited him to join

The ' Duff forces point to large improvement programs undertaken by the governor

including his drive to clean up Ppfinsylvania's streams and

hospital. ~

uild more mental capacity and traffic arteries. » . -

THE Duff forces will be

alded by the 30,000-job state:

GOPR. 1980 BY NEA SERVICE. INC. T. M. REG. ©. & PAT. OFF.

"You've told me for the last time you'll dr Fdon't hurry your supper!”

publicans and 1,955,288 Democrats, with the Democrats gaining. The late President Roosevelt carried the state in 1936, 1940 and 1944. In 1948,

Il me full of holes if

Fa ol

DEMOCRATS are accorded a’ good chance of re-electing Sen. Francis J. Myers, 48, majority whip of the Senate. An

squelch at last. the hopeful

myth that Chinese communism is going to be “different.”

= - 2 GEN, MAO is said to have come back from Moscow deeply impressed by the things he saw and hearfi—probably including a promise of overlordship in the prospective areas

have announced bluntly that party leaders who failed to understand or appreciate such simple truths couldn't be trusted in positions of responsibility.

; ” ” » MAO has ordered popularization of the phrase “our Soviet Union” when people speak of Russia.

; . ibli i f Asiatic Communist expan- The princigal source of this the Democratic Party, after payroll. The Grundys have the state went Republican in administration Senator, he has 0 the head of the class : : reading a statement of prin- * their own organization, based a presidential year for the first managed to win sizable support sion if he goes along with the information said it would be 2 e Je Coed . ciples drafted by Mr. Duff and on part on the Pennsylvania time since 1932. ; from some Pennsylvania indus- Kremlin. He is said now to wrong to imagine that there a Rrans If it was a mistake to make China a member of the other Republican governors. Manufacturers Association, Democrats were able to trialists. Their candidate for have become the foremost is any schism in the Commu- : ‘big five, that error would be compounded by transferring Red-headed Gov. Duff sees which Mr. Grundy founded, carry the state only once in an governor is 51-year-old Rich- apologist for Russia's special nisg heirarchy on the National TON posi i i , Grundylsm as what's chiefly and related groups. - off - year * election — in 1934, ardson Dilworth, Philadelphia rights in Manchuria, Sinkiang ist-Internationalist line that Groat the tion to a government which may not even be a wrong with the. Republican Voter registration, as last when they elected a Demo- city treasurer and Marine vet- and Tibet—if the latter region Mao's virtual ultimatum will all ree free agent. Party. reported, counted 2,001,762 Re- cratic governor and Senator. eran. : can be “liberated. not smooth out. : fronts. Pr 7 » te i r Lo } but some