Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 15 October 1951 — Page 14
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DEAR BOSS . . by DanKidney ~~ Senator Jenner Brings Back ‘Oust Acheson’ Campaign
The Indianapolis Times ~~ A Good Front
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A SCRIPPS-HOWARD NEWSPAPER °
g ROY W, HOWARD WALTER LECKRONE President
Editor, Business Manager
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PAGE 14
Monday, Oct. 15, 1951
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ied oy $1.10 » month. Sunday. 100 & 00DY. Telephone PL aza 5551 Give Light and the People Will Find Ther Own Way
blished daily by Indianapolis Times Publish. one 9, nited Press, Scripps-Howard Newspaper Alliance NEA Serv.
Member of
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35c a
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WASHINGTON, Oct, 15—Ever since the San Francisco Jap. treaty signing, GOP senators have been letting their “oust Acheson” stew sort of simmer on the back burner, Today, however, the anti-Acheson business was brought back to a new boiling point by Sen. William E. Jenner (R. Ind) one
Secretary of State, Dean Ache$on, the junior Senator from Indiana asked a series of loaded questions with the suggestion that he already
you or any representative or agency of the ad. minfstratioy with the Japanese government or its representatives, in connection with Japanese treaties or agreements with Red China under the peace treaty. - . “What exactly is your present position ang that of the State Department in connection with
“What is your position with reference to a Japanese trade treaty or treaties with Nationals ist China? “TWO: I am reliably informed that Britain's
! In ’ 3 weak, daily only. 256, Sunday only, lle Siall rates {0 Jno ans of the movement's ploneers. § a possible Japanese trade treaty with Red daly and ‘sunday, $i000'a year. gal, Wood "Canada and Addressing a letter to the | 2 as meee 3
ecognition of Red Ww had the answers, Fl objective in insisting on the r : ”\ The Jenner letter reads: China Jae hot INEAOn 10 the Seiten conduc : “In view of the great con- poun e But the People Saved Us State Dorsrtionl j fusion that still hangs over have soy ioformation SO Bon boo Jose mM i : iori tate Department's 4 our policy in Asia, I should plans.or ho : I' IS obvious that the majority of the 8 . ep f Red i 7H N ~~ =M : like po Oy you a few ques- Sen. Jenner . oe the currency unit in the trade of Red China’ Some 25 consultants who came out for recognition o e \ 4 wit, - 7 tions about matters that reliably informed Or in the trade of Japan? price i China during that ‘October, 1949, conference were much t/8 x oo Us J have Sten Sraubling me and would appreciate What About Doug Threat? higher i inion. we. iy your giving me a direct answer. with ti} eoncerned over adverse publis spinon A g © “ONE: I am reliably informed that you “DO YOU KNOW whether it is true tha would The transcript of the proceedings now released shows E : Whelan y etan oy soot YM British commissioner threatened to have Gen. Wola. there was much discussion of “the exact timing” of recogni- intimated to the prime minister o pan, MacArthur removed from his post as command. 3 ove . LE ¢ the American public connection with his visit here for the signing er-in-chief if MacArthur did not agree to the et. tion so as to soften the impact on the American public. *3 of the Japanese treaty, that if he entered into British proposal on the pound sterling? A Dis Owen Lattimore deplored a domestic ustien mn whith a treaty with Re China you would interpose “Thank you for Slaniying het questions." 4 ah “ nolitical) parties feels continuously no objection, but that you did discourage his The létter’s text was looked upon as coming gach of the two great ire th tion as a whole entering into a treaty with the Chinese Na- from Miss Edna Lonigan, Sen. Jenner's ghost bjt hn under pressure to demonstrate to 3 Ne : : tionalists. writer on foreign relations. This may have vo that it is not less anfi-Russian and anti-Communist and anti- “Will you please let me know what com- been based on the last line, which male obsery- Sn appeasement than the other great party.” x /. . -mitments or suggestions were entered into by. ers labeled a “feminine gem. rou Therefore, he said, the administration party “must = - . ng to ici ate i h a manner as to share o present any policies they advocate in suc °r NInconte.
expose itself to the minimum to the charge of appeasement.”
_ Prof. Nathaniel Peffer put it more bluntly. - He said:
China) except that a lot of people are going to blow up.
Convicted of draft evasion he tried to plead that Portugal forbade its citizens to serve in foreign armies. Now he says he isn’t a Portuguese citizen, that he allowed the citizenship to lapse and is entitled to permanent haven here
as a “stateless” person.
To most people it would seem that the minute Rubinstein wrapped himself in the Portuguese flag to alibi his draft evasion he acquired a quick ticKRet across the Atlantic.
That was in 1943 but he still is with us.
To be sure he spent two of the intervening years in jail to which he finally went for draft fraud after utilizing all possible legal delays. But it has been a couple of years since he got out and the deportation proceedings still seem
fouled in red tape.
A first hearing on deportation was set aside as not having followed all the proper procedure. Results of a second one have yet to be announced. The recommendations of an immigration examiner go-to Washington for final
consideration.
We hope thet this will be brief and to the point. No
further time sho
d be lost in handing this scamp his walk-
ing papers. The Immigration Service already has stalled
EF A TE HS ER SO EU ROT FT
"Lot mo fel you all the bad things Mom hasn't found out of Ohio, to reject the nomina- b co-ordinate Jar'too long, 5 Cr Sboutcethen you can lecture me on all of them!" ; shipping arms or strategic ma- eb agreed 4m an 11% per cent tion, : ’ ; Toreigu-aia patie, ° : al ; 2 / , - '
ate, provides for hundreds of air bases, supply depots, hospitals, barracks and harbor installations. Also included was $200 million for work at the hydrogen bomb project in South Carolina. ’ ; Rep. H. R. Gross (R. Ia.) tried unsuccessfully to kill a $12,821,000 item for improvement of an airport near the family farm of President Truman at Grand View, Mo.
Foreign Aid APPROPRIATIONS totaling $8.2 billion were voted for foreign military and economic aid. Of the total, $7.4 billion was new money. The rest was previously appropriated but not spent. Republican efforts to or‘der reductions ranging up to $1.4 billion, were rejected.
Aid Cut-Off
A BILL was passed to shut off foreign ald to countries
LABOR . . . By Fred W. Perkins
RS RR RE OA TRAC
age Boar
‘Heads
AE TERE OS
or Trou
e
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TAX RETURNS of James P. Finnegan, former internal revenue collector at St. Louis, showed he had outside income of $103,056 in 1947-49. Mr, Finnegan sald the outside Income came from his legal business but he said he had permission to continue: his legal practice when he took , the collector's job. On three occasions, Finnegan said, he tried to resign but the White House persuaded him to remain. However, Treasury Secretary Jofin Snyder said he repeatedly had asked for Finnegan's resigna- - tion, Finnegan finally resigned under fire last April
Union Shop .
A BILL to permit union shop arrangements without a special election among employees was passed and sent to the White House,
Taxes A CONFERENCE commit~
' gerve in
only slightly more than half of what President Truman had asked. Higher corporation income taxes and numerous raises in exgise taxes also are included.
Senate A STAFF investigatiom of charges that Sen. Joseph R. McCarthy (R. Wis.) is unfit to the Senate was ordered by an elections sub= committee. The charges were brought by Sen, William Ben-
.ton (D. Conn.), A report on:
the Investigation is to be filed by Now. 1.
Bowles Confirmed
PRESIDENT TRUMAN'S nomination of Chester Bowles as Ambassador to India was confirmed, 43 to 33. The wartime OPA boss and former governor of Connecticut was approved despite a Republican effort, led by Sen. Ro A. Taft
was taken to forestall their aps pointment while Comgress is not in session. Sen. Paul H. Douglas (D. IIL) had said the nominees—C. J. Harrington and Joseph H, Drucker—were “personally obnoxious” to him,
Atomic Information EXCHANGE with other free
nations of information on atomic energy which does not
.deal with weapons was ap=-
proved. Even non-weapon information, however, will be subject to sharp restrictions.
Military Spending * THE MILIT nding bill—$56.9 Fo ARY aalonding
‘ to the White House,
‘President
. / - PRESIDENT TRUMAN nominated W. Averell Harri= foreign. poney be orelgn policy matters, to be head of the TT a, secur-
bl RAR BERN
ity agency. Mr. Harriman's
he
I'he from th prices n
i 2 ® ®» a 8 2 sy w . ‘ i cent bel - ‘ , i . i ASHINGTON, Oct. 15—The government's If the union insists on keeping one or more $ : . “IF THIS country ter isata stage mn which the govern 8 be 2 \ d aE i revamped machinery to stop strikes affecting of the companies under strike pressure, the In an 2 ment is hogtied against its better judgment because some RY v7 ; defense industries is heading into triple-threat board will be up against an unwelcome chofee. fend, 3 = people are going to blow up, then God alone help the repub- : . trogble tnls veg, ered to. tne ‘Wars 16 sight try to work Dut settlements ay lo Ihe lo Zems § lic.” The transcript shows applause over this sentiment, SHORTAGES AGAIN .- sa By Frederick C. Othman Stabilization Board by President Truman in- dent to seek injunctions against the union under under g 3 Similarly, Prof. Arfhur Holcombe agreed that “reluc- . volve the same powerful union the “national emergenay Sections ¢ ot the an If the : : taotos : : A w s , i tance to face the issue springs from misgivings respecting Tw 0 Littl e C ar S } oO O Bi Oo 2 ihe £10 Dalek ; Aviomciile i g eoujas 9 sec ny me nh : the political .situation.” The China White Paper, which r ne 1 14] n 2) # authorized to try to settle de- The board is [rorking under more difficult about 11 , i i : conditions than ted during World War II. ents, fA was the State Department's formal notification that we had WASHINGTON, Oct. 15—The time has come the House, was sitting next‘to the Senator. Hal- pron Bg To A 3 Yo of pi Bi Bl IN SE : sold out Nationalist China, was “a good beginning, 8aid to consider the big, fat hearses with the chrom- leck is the fellow who rides in two Cadillacs, president of the auto workers. pledges in return for representation on the War Beans w i Prof. Holcombe, and “if the administration follows in the jum grins and the white-walled wheels that one of which is his own. The other big black John W. Livingston, a vice Labor Board. Such 2 Dodge in this | Sergency 100 pout : same spirit, timing moves as best it can, I think it will get clutter up the U. S. Capital drives and make one is furnished him by the government. He president of that union, is one : Bas | Pore bees ih A ee i, pee war i : ‘public support.” life unsafe for Sen. J. Willlam Fulbright (D. whispered to the Senator and then he an- Pi the Wage Board's six labor the wage board, ; ye ts i : i “ . AML), nounced: : : ‘ : . ile 8 2 Thus the State Department was advised by “the pre THiS problem 7 "Pve just found out what Kind of ear the + .. UBAeT Wage Board policy Increasing Disturbances x I He vailing group” of its consultants to go ahead full steam % never thought Senator drives. I find that it is a small one.” as eth orl be o atk ; IF THE board comes through this triple test cotton with recognizing Red China, regardless of how the Ameri- 4 Charles E. Wilson, “No, it’s not,” retorted Sen. Fulbright, “It's ‘hat production Tesum Mr. Revther without harm to its prestige and powers, it will sought b En ; in the struck plants. If the . h t precedents for other industrial dis- hi bli ht feel. the production czar, a Ford. I'd like to have a smaller one than ier its ave set precede + While can public mig : ; . J and his chief deputy, that.” union refuses to o o Ro « « » trouble turbances. They are increasing in number, and *hal 0 We haven't a doubt that it was prepared to accept this @hi-/4) Manley Fleischman, Il Behe Du a oni Engerous situation apparently tis mainly na ! advice. But, just as Professor Peffer feared, a lot of people y over vould have ta An lll Wind, efc. which officials fear might cause the collapse of LX Sop Wa Sar GiSuey centers faivly cents. th 3 did blow up only a few weeks later when it became known 7: $388 er, oy HEE SEN. BLAIR MOODY (D. Mich.), whose the disputes-settling machinery. on a corporation-wide basis, instead of the indi- Sue y that the-Chinese Communists were holding our Consul Bod tembleq Constituents largely are in the automobile busi- The strikes are in 14 plants of the Borg- igus] plapt basis to which it says it has been EE : ‘ : "statesmen that short, DSS, wondered if Fleischman believed Detroit Warner Corp., maker of automotive parts, with limited bY 3 decision of the Natianar Labor acked General Angus Ward a prisoner in Mukden. Public indigna- } statesmen thin. actually could get the metal it needed and In 500 men idled; the Wright Aeronautical plant Relations Bodie, Money matters moe Mv centage tion then, fortunately, staved off recognition long enough A Ee of a YthINE the proper amounts®o it could turn out whole » at Woodridge, N. J., where 8700 employees have in the other two disputes. L : until the Korean War proved the people were right about | about to pinch us ay, 2Uiomoblles that would run. stopped work on airplane engines, including jets; Conciliation service records show its agents In just ‘ : : These two most “They could decide tomorrow to make more and the Douglas Aircraft Plant at Long Beach, are now working on 130 strikes that have idled colture J : Asiatic communism. : ral tlemen Small cars and fewer big ones, as Sen. Ful- Cal, which makes airplanes and has 9000 men 107.000 men. The number of strikes is larger pointed i : : Je : aun ge Dm bright has suggested,” said Fleischman. out. v 3 than usual, but the number of men iveived ia prices a . » \ : “A very interesting suggestion,” said the The Wright and Douglas cases reached the not. Some of the strikes, in addition to those ruafy. industry said that ; 1 News rint: 5 A Defense Material fan ; Senator from the motor capital. board Friday—too late, it was said, for anything now before the wage board, have defense impli- Ymve be | pray: is printed on is called SRS th ed tug Hu of Ren, Joa» they This debate, as you may have guessed, to be done oo them over the week-end. The cations. Among them are strikes at Westing- a the i HE P your newspaper 1s p on is 930,000 motorcars. They said that if the many- Pleased me mightily. For years now my own board called a special meeting for this morning house Electric, Buffalo, by 6000 members of the eh z .~ newsprint. . facturers could # . ey some ersatz deals and campaign for smaller, simpler sedans has been to decide its procedure. The Borg-Warner dis- International Electrical Workers; the Pratt- -an get = Four-fifths of all the newsprint used in the United maybe stick 2 their machinery together getting exactly nowhere. Now, at least, the pute will be discussed in a meeting tomorrow Whitney Engine Works, by 2000 members of through 2 0 oniih oo Ae i A . = ula PoWers-that-be are talking about the idea. It between Peter Seitz, the board's disputes officer, the AFL Machinists; and the machine-tool works Hoard, : States comes from Canada. chewing gum, they mig abe lon took a cold war to get ‘em on the subject and and spokesmen for the corporation and the of the Brown and Sharpe Mtg. Co., Providence, most sel $ A vital ingredient in the production of newsprint is a ery automount "HCH this proves that it's an fll-wind, et cetera. union. R. I, by 4300 members of the machinists. a z ’ vial . partment “ sulphur. The United States is the world’s principal producer before the Model T. Pagifne : of sulphur. Only one ton of sulphur is needed to turn out . Fleischman sald the industry was working Fini 50 tons of newsprint. now on a scheme to make these of steel; if * Cla? * _ Under : The procedure would be obvious, and simple enough, that turns out to be practical, we may get more oosier rorum-— 1 S$ rossinie to Uy eace asTmers % e P ! . ' sedans than we expected. Sen. Fulbright was . loal: on 1 = i nse build-up. We'd be sending Can- pee « yng prices ris i hey Waren I he Seferse bul ad be shi 2 RE Tot impressed. MR. EDITOR: If the country needs arms, give them the problem and the public monies being lost are a fate. Ie g C3 enough suphur pping . “Wouldn't you be justified in asking General Why is it that the United States must al- arms but make sure somebody is there who these two actions: loan plus 3 print as usual, but sulphur has become a strategic material Motors ana Ford to build small cars instead of ways Le the sucker in this peace business? will see that those arms stay in the country Dictatorship and police state. et the g i i y p , into Red hands : used by increasing amounts in steel, chemical, petroleum Shiese Rge hearaes that Satter up the streets After each and every war we do everything 80d dom fall 8 EN Be otiaitat Cnt “By thelr actions ye shall know them.” and — i i i i of Washington?" he demanded. in our power to make peace with the rest of That was our trouble natio D3. jt is by their own actions that the Indiana i refining and other industries. The Defense Production Fleischman said he could do that, all right, the but it just ea seem to work. We spent big money there, but we didn’t want Republicans have caused their names to be GOP E 3 Administration sets the policy in allocation of such defensive but he'd rather pass the metal to the auto folks After WW I we spent a lot of money on the to bother to see that the money was being used jin1ed with these two despicable terms, to every Home i materials. and let them decide how many vehicles to League of Nations, gave it our time and sincere the way we thought it was being used. freedom-loving man . . . the most hateful forms The ® i : : press out. trust . How much of that the Reds got is anybody's of governmental behavior. e R : Now Canada 1s worried about getting enough sulphur “These big cars are becoming such a After WW II w joined the United Nations BUeSS. It is not a message of common sense I oat : r e s : ; 2 to produce its normal supply of newsprint. Canada has pyjsance,” the Senator sighed. “If they'd only sedis We can buy peace, but we can't buy it unless ino today. will be ) z declared newsprint a national essential, but this countr build little ones, we could get two cars for one 0G Make sure that it stays alive by f & we see what we are buying, It's just like buying : & ob meeting 1 ’ FWSpLint : ) : y and we could relieve the traffic situation around Dillons into it. What do the other countrles "+" vou don’t send money to a store and ran a i hasn’t.- 5 the capital.” gs I ney Somes aloks Te rigan not know what kind of a suit you are getting. YOUR MONEY is Sommon gente. Not losing Saturday HR Ink 3 ied . If there's anything wrong with that. idea, it is common sense. And not having to pay for Sssciatt $ WE THINK newsprint;is an essential, for no more ec a, pu BaPhense. Beh. Charles Bab miserly old bat who pinches a nickel until the 1.4 live to know whae it fa. : the same thing twice 13 common sense, assoelath cogent reason than that advanced by a House Commerce ’ ” publican Tloor Leader of Indian rides the buffalo. ; It's about time Uncle Sugar got that big Against the issue, we can apply common etl. soa F : : : d got the other supposed peace : subcommittee the other day. This committee, headed by > eo 0 stick olit and g sense. tral then : i i i PAYDAY : HERE we are right on the brink of a third loving countries in line. Fact. is it may be 2 But against these actions of dictatorship ducted b; z Rep . Lindley Beckworth of Texas, in a Feport on newsprint, world war with this Egyptian business and you bit 100 late now, . Reader. City and police state I bring an entirely different _ all-day s : said: : : . . : THE DAY I have been waiting for . . . Is can bet your boots if we-have it thé story will had . message, one addressed" to all free men, who . At-the 3 “Questions are raised from time to time as to the here at long, long last . . . and skies seem so be the same. ‘Our Police State’ ” would continue to live together as brothers in a get Sa s essentiality of newsprint and the need for newsprint in the much brighter than . . . they did in days gone Uncle will shell out all the sugar and the World where you have freedom of epinien. atten idst of pl to th ti 1 def. We li past I feel as though life’s “burden is rest of the world will cry out that all we are MR. EDITOR: It is the message of common hate. Bl ator § i midst of plans to strengthen the national defense. We ive bes foe , buries 4 ‘3 ° doing is spending money while they are spend- “Go to their homes,” said the police state. Yesterday it was the Acor of the Democratic Sen Bor § in a world of constant change on battlefields of words which = D° longer quite so rough . .. and for at least a ing lives. Unfortunately, we spend money and “Arrest them and bring them back.” Representatives on which the police state he subi control and direct the destinies of peoples and nations. 9aY oF 80... things will not be so tough .... lives in every war. ~The scene is free America, remember, and: ynocked. . ailing Newsprint must be c onsidered essential along with other my wallet that was empty . . . will feel a thrill The idea of spending money for peace is not Nazi Germany. Tomorrow, it could just as well be your door. pr, : ‘es : " 8 I know . .. when I receive my just reward .., fine. Saving lives is worth any amount of dol- When the Republicans didn’t want to take Your answer is your vote, your bullet is your dire necessities of nations. ; and fill it up with dough . . . I'll go home to lars.. But if we want to spend money to secure action and make laws, and the Democrats did, ballot. Wh & A decision on the amount of sulphur to be allocated to the wife and kids . . . who always welcome me Peace We've got to get tough and tell these tne dictator banged the gavel and everybod May I suggest that this paper, or some paper : Canada for the last three months of 1951 will soon be mad + «+ and I will see their eyes light up . . . with ~~ other nations how that money is going to be want home. : with courage, begin today to publish a list of CE] 3 : l m e. happiness and glee . . . then I will give my used. When the Democrats didn't want to take the names of the men who stood up for these Oct. i It probably will set the pattern for the 1952 allocations. Rewtaide Vet lh to she who is the boss If a country needs food more San arms, action and make laws, and the Republicans did, actions this year in the Indiana Legislature? Bor Q 2 In reaching a i iti «+ and next payday rolls around ... I'll buy food for them but make sure they use the the police state sent state police to drag the And a list of the names of the men who were el Q 3 ill g 3 Quien, we hope the authorities concerned still be at a loss. food for the people of their nation and don't men from their homes if necessary. against them? The = wl pe wi : ouse on ies on the essentiality of —By Ben Burroughs send it over to some low-down Red sympathizer. Far above the importance of the welfare —Young Tom Paine, City. red fl: x newsprint as a defense material. : , ing it 3 . nel Fi £ . » “~ » - : Fouled in Red Tape SIDE GLANCES By Galbraith CONGRESS ROUNDUP . . . By Charles Egger - f HE CASE of Serge Rubinstein, who is waiti : : = y waiting the = ’ ° elle . ° ° outcome of deportation’ proceedings, Is hardly eau. =i “fz Giant Military Construction Bill OK'd lated to make the average American think very highl ry : y B of his government. WASHINGTON, Oct. 15— terials to Communist-controlled increase in income taxes for llinois Jud es The former Wall Street plunger, a native of Russia Last week in Congress the SolgiHs viless PresigentiTr most individuals, effective Nov. BY TOL g who claimed Portuguese citizenship when he first ran foul Hause voted $44 billion to pay Tan 0's Lisl SUCH SHIPMER'S © 1. ‘Thebigher rates areina bill BOLTS Yots ihe Romina: of the law, has been in the public's hair since, i for the nation’s biggest mili- {5,104 gates, ° » which would produce $5.7 bil- .o° PY President Truman of ’ public's hair since, in 1943, his tary construction pro, The H ax two district judges for Illinois . . . » gram. on more revenue a year, misdeeds began catching up with him. bill, which now goes to the Sen- 10X Collectors were rejected, The floor actiofnt
