Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 15 November 1951 — Page 24
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It's obvious why he made that statement. His police force isn’t large enough to protect us against this sort of
He now has 749 policemen and feels he should have 500 more for a city of this size. To have an adequate police force will cost more money. Might be cheaper than what's going on now on the
Labor Party has served formal ngtice that it will return the industry to state control when in. gets back in office. Since Labor polled more popular votes in the recent election than the Tories, who got more parliamentary seats, the possibility of another Labor government is not ignored. That fact cools the ardor of some private investors, who normally would be “anxious to risk their capital in steel. :
Even a remote possibility of three reorgani-
so bad that the people can’t stand it any longer and believe me folks, it can get worse than it is now, too. Don't ever forget that for ona moment. So the Republicans have come up with a new scheme to get in power to make it worse for you and I. They have tried so hard to stop this easy living that you and I have been fortunaté enough to enjoy for the last 20 years that they come up with the idea of running Gen. Ike or Gen. Mac for President.
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J } oi rv £5 oF 8 Se : ® : : Ld oe : : as - - . 9 : A . = ® 2 J : 2 : i ! ES ig ; : . fii : 2 ¥ 2 : : : » * . - . 7 - Ye i . : + . a . : Qo PE ; = y wh ; = I di olis T POLITICAL FIGHT . ... By Marshall McNeil rig ) ¥ ~~ 1he Inamanap 1mes Ee | ah Battle tat T ST. BF * THORS Es Democrats Lack Leadership In Battle Against Truman yx : ASCRIFPEHONAND NEWSPAPER <= : bid oe d ubli didat : than Gen. Eisenhower, ; ( ! ; i hunne publican candidate than . h : HOT SPRINGS, Ark. Nov. 15—Southern F Byrnes of South Carolina to speak out Dixie rebellion, likewise has thus far s : . ROY W. HOWARD WALTER LECKRONE HENRY W. MANZ Democrats Rave not moved an inch closer to again against President Truman and in‘ the role. ) - And in any SonYersalions ume na b a y President : Editor Business Manager their cherished. objective of defeating President favor of either Sens. Richard Russell of Georgia Such men as Govs, Fielding Wag, of ye the De Yori often mentioned that this ; a day, Nov. 15, 1951 Truman in 1952 as the resuit of the Southern = or Harry Byrd of Virginia ds his candidates = sisSippi, Herman Talmadge«~of Georgia, : oubE r was elected in Littl P AGE 24 Thurs ay, Nov. i > ’ Shivers of Texas, John Battle of Virginia also year a Republican mayor wa n ° 3 : Governors’ Conference just ended here. for. president. Eut hardly had the Words passed oppose President Truman but none has at- Rock for the first time since the 1880's. Thous- : They fear and mistrust the Truman admin- Gov. Byrnes’ lips than Gov. Elbert Carvel of opp Rd to ae pall ands of Southern Democrats voted Republican . Owned and published daily by Andianspoils Times Publish. istration as much as ever Delaware said he believed it was unrealistic to empte . hat test ; ing Co. 214 W Maryland St. Postal Zone 9. Member of ” : Ene h s B 8 R 1 1d Such pro-Truman Southern governors as in that contest. United Press. Scripps-Howard Newspaper Alllance. NEA Serv o o> o> believe either Sen. Byrd or Sen. Russell cou K Scott: of North Carolina. Sid McMath of oa 08 ic8" and" Audit Bureau of Cifouinsion BUT. THUS far they are leaderless. They - be nominated. Gov. Carvel favors Mr. Truman EIY BoOLL:0 J ten Murr f Oklahoma : | n Price in Marion County 8 cents a copy for dally and 10¢ pave favorite candidates who have not indicated in 1952. : Arkansas and Johnston Murray o THE DILEMMA in which some anti-Truman for Sunday: delivered by carrier dally and Sunday. 35¢ a ave favorite candidates who have not indicate mri helieve the Dixiecrat sentiment is weaker in oo 00 0" hq others find themselves was evi. ee aly Ov 510.00 a year. daly. 1000 a year Sunday they. would accept nomination. They do not a the South now than four years ago. dent in the answer given a reporter's question \ 3 FH $500; Ali “other ‘states, US. possessions Canada and even know if their arch political foe, Harry GOV. BYRNES said he was encouraged by his The anti-Truman campaign might end up by Gov. Shivers. } (Co) Mexico. daily, $1.10 a month. Sunday. 10c a copy Truman, is going to run again. They're as belief that never before have party labels meant as a movement operated state by state, the He Was asked: “If the next Democratic conTelcphone PL aza 3551 ignorant as everyone else about Gen. Dwight so little in the South. He thinks thé South no idea being, if the law allows, to get anti-Tru- vention nominates Mr. Truman, and you are a Earlier - - : Ww Eisenhower, > longer is solid, and whoever wins the: South man electors on the ballot. candidate on the Democratic state ticket In : Tim Give light ana the Peupie Will Fipa Their Own Way Meanwhile, the Truman administration has is going to have to fight for it. But Gov. Byrnes o> BD o> Texas, will you bolt national ticket? ROCKPO! taken the offensive—such as the speech appeal- said: “I do not want to assume any role of AT THIS conference, as In the National Gov. Shivers smiled and replied: 1akedowns . = ing for party loyalty made to the governors leadership. But I am ready to co-operate wiih Governors’ Conference six weeks ago, it was “I will answer. you: then,” apparently mean- . 'achers cor : D u Situ tion here by House Speaker Sam Rayburn of Texas. anyone who feels as I do.” evident that Southern leaders think Sen. Robert ing after the next Democratic convention picks »day to a ( A angero S a Mr. Rayburn’s address goaded Gov. James Sen. Byrd, another possible leader of the Taft of Ohio would make a less effective Re- its candidate. ’ : ng politic : : : chools. ‘ v ) N THE growth of any city bere are Sint the Soeidlp ts ENGLAND B L d I b \ . . : REE Raa ERIE TERRE RAR RRR RARE RRA TR REN Ean Teachels “lags” 4 lic institutions and services. By lags Sas vdwell De Ee A RB { k th Pp I : e lals were g . © call “lags” in public institu vies, By loge y Lu nny rgentina Returns From the Polls # . : ve they mean institutions and services are not a le to ta e care > a : 0 oO SI er orum : ne he of the needs of a swiftly increasing population. Can C Urc r { LL gh ir 3 ra : : vorced ther That is the case in our fair city today. : aR Fi 3 "I do not agree with a word that you say, : Republican : nd .. : 2 kilog : but | will défenc io the death your right : obs. We don’t have enough hospitals, doctors and nurses. Ic S to say i."—Voltaire, i , Prosecuto ‘ i i i d t 1 . ATT ALLL) SERRRRRRNRRRINIIEINTDSY IOVS HIII INN Sra a rT tS wi witness Our fire fighting force is too small and inadequately Bren wen " lay, said th equipped. ; . WASHINGTON, Nov. 15—The House of ‘That Fatal Step’ /ind up to "wr h schools and teachers Commons vote to turn Britain's nationalized : ‘Among t! We don't have enoug 5 = steel industry back to private enterprise accom- MR. EPITOR: Yas 188 Our streets and traffic systems are inadequate. plished little. Despite Tory campaign pledges Yes, it seems to me, some people are going Jrmex ey We don’t even have enough policemen to protect our of fast action, the job will take a long time to take that fatal step toward another depres- called by citizens , and the final result will not look like the old 4 sion. It sounds drastic aliright, but nevertheless Teachers A : ‘ private industry. FEL it Is so. bert said s i a 8 : : Tuesday night an East Side mother is tester by The egds cetnot be urischanbled dnd pit i! Look at the past primary election results, I Ine ruse would-be robber. This is only one of a long string of crimes ,.. i into all their original shells. At best they 4f hope and pray that the rest of the people in the Yel that has built up a prowler terrorism in that end of town probably only can be cut up in fresh forms # United States are not as stupid as the majority 2 built it up to a point where vigilante groups are now and forced into some new shells, 8 of the Hoosiers. Now, I know you are saying or ae Ga) Io . in One reason for thi: is that some of origina! : thinking that I am a hard loser, but you are { ch Bo orming. 3 a Shareholders would rather keep their present wrong again, just like you were Nov. 8 when ; ANG Intrady 8» : J. : k 312 per cent bonds than take the new stock. 0 .: df Al Clark t be vour Mavor GOP precin THERE is great danger in vigilante groups. They take This applies especially to some of the least y ns 2 p yt CE : De y it “Mr. Sch : : i o enforce profitable of the old co ies. fou see, folks, IT am neither a Democrat or : . the law into their own untrained hands and ry t e een lig hp Te Te Nemec { world’ Hae it as they see fit. More often than not, this homemade THIS pt a ae 0 De new eatue SapHal an independent voter. In that way, I vote for the i DE . . vp = Sup 3 r at. ritain is ’ i « , 7 ive n¢ o enforcement’’ is unjust because it is motivated by fear. in the worst of all of her severe post-war nl Hn Rr Ee Tar I could lool Too many ifinocent people are injured when the vigi- Sconomie eases Capa) To cautions; aside from try to tell us that the Democrats start these : Ne Jace ot ) e various adverse . ‘o. 4 1 ately i” rel ' lantes take over. Songitions relating to any revived private steel Nals at Ne Ae Nn unAlely RVING. Jel) i teachers Ye . . i 3, 8 n : h Police Chief Jack O'Neal has given his approval to the ndustry. it says. quote: There will be wars and rumor of ( a i i ‘ars is nothin at the Republicans t operation. He's been 3 polisentan long enough to KBoW Ardor Cogled oF the Democrats can do to change that Srey igi do and yet he says, “More power 2 Sotho la ; yesterday w what vigilante groups can do and y ys, Powe THE MOST obvious is that nobody knows aaa i ra ori how long steel will remain denationalized. The IT ALSO SAYS in the Bible that it will get ty schools.
sociation n couple trust political con his reappoir
Bubbl For F
the House committee investigating these scandals has waited three weeks for the Justice Department to decide whether to turn over to the committee some of its files necessary to the probe. Still no files.
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MR. SNYDER'S request for public information on _ the skulduggery in the Internal Revenue Bureau is inter"esting and useful. Interesting because the Secretary finally seems to be really disturbed. Useful, because this bureau, ‘after all, is the government agency which first the taxpayers’ money, and the public should be as concerned about a cleanup as Congress, or anybody else. Mr. Snyder’s request deserves a sincere public response. Simply address him: Secretary of the Treasury John W. Snyder, Washington, D. C. He naturally will refer your letter to the Revenue Bureau. But no bureau can be completely trusted to investigate itself. So we recommend that you send a carbon copy of all tips to the King Subcommittee, R. 1039-A, New House Office Bldg., Washington, D. C. : _ Then, just to be sure, send a carbon to Sen. John J. Williams, Senate Office Bldg., Washington, D. C. He's the man who started the whole exposure.
andles
state corporation should be continued. The Churchill cabinet, which will not even ‘ntroduce its specific denationalization bill until next February, says it plans a new board— representing - government, management and consumers—to regulate the industry.
Still another. reason for Mr. Churchill's cautious approach is that the change-over must be made without loss to the national economy and the rearmament effort. Clement Davies, Liberal Party leader whose support is important to Mr. Churchill, thinks nationalization should be continued for a while, much as he hates it.
Views on News
By DAN KIDNEY
SOME Congressmen are circling the globe so fast they scarcely have time to unpack a single prejudice. & o THAT outfit President Truman wore for his Sunday stroll at Key West proves that “everything is up to date in Kansas City.” “> Bh
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FASTEST way to restore faith in the American dollar would be to let down the immigrations bars. All foreigners have faith in it. o» do BH
OUR OFFICE scientist figured out that those
tific and also practical. Whenever the broadcasting company wants you to listen, it can switch on your set by remote control subsonic wave, and there you are, trapped. Life hardly would be J& worth living. Or, as Jack R. Reed, one of the coproducers of this marvelous little horror, said: “The danger of an automatic world is having to do what the machinery dictates.” The only thing that saved us was the FCC; it showed a noticeable lack of enthusiasm for this electronic invasion of our lives. Even Reed seems not too disappointed. ~ At the moment he is president of Washing ton Reporters, Inc, an organization that sells news to radio broadcasters. During the war, however, he was an executive of radio station WIW in Akron, O.-One of the engineers there was Gerald Roberts. “And ‘we got to thinking about the best kind
of air-raid warning signals,” Reed said. “Rob- -
erts figured that sirens were not so hot if ne could produce a radio set that would turn {tself on when the ‘emergency developed: He said he believed he could build such a device, if I'd find him the right kind of sensitive filter coil. I got it. It cost $700.
suburbs would begin to play. “We even went a little further. For six months the engineer in charge in the morning would turn my set on every morning at 7. This automatically would start the coffee’ to boiling. For a while there 1 also had it toast my bread. but this did seem a little complicated.
Happy News
“AT 7:30 A. M. there was a news broadcast on a rival station that I liked. So our man downtown would look at his chart, touch and tune my radio over to the he'd Even we
another switch, other station. After the news was over, switch me back to station WJIJW, were amazed. The Messrs. Reed and Roberts figured that on a production line, they could build small radios their owners couldn't control for each. They also applied for a patent, but the patent office later reported they had invented nothing because all the coils, switches. and relays already had been invented by somebody else. The FCC, which had given them authority to try the widget expérimentally, was not impressed’ by the fact that it worked. Inventor Roberts now is chief engineer of WJW. Like Reed he has other things to do than pester the government with demands for a radio set that turns on at somebody else's pleasure. The idea has been pigeonholed. That's good.
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would beg the private schools to operate. A vear would cure them. This is not sour-grapes for I went to No. 35 and No. 8 Schools. 0 Again I ask what if the private schools should demand their share of the taxes?
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THE PUBLIC schools are over-crowded badly managed, cand I'm not talking about teachers’ salaries. Anyone teaching 40 to 50 children deserves a good salary I recall Ada Duzan, teacher at No. 33 and I quote “Never look for trouble.
“You will find it if you do. “For as you measure to your neighbors “He will measure back to you.” So don't push the private schools too far They could demand a salary for their teachers as.other states do : —Mrs, W. A, Collins, 920 W right St.
FOSTER'S FOLLIES
NEW YORK, -An Army recruiting sergeant undecided about re-enlisting. had his mind made up for him. Hi# wife re-recruited him.
He thought for a while he might be ag civilian, ' This sergeant with backbone of steel. But now it may be that his face is vermillion; Think how a tough soldier must feel.
His good wife decided the proper course for him, At top sergéfint's pay none ean scoff
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i Hollyw . zations of a basic industry—fro They no doubt got together and discussed ; East Side, though. state to private to state = i oe Private to who they could run that had a reputation to get ! male StH fri £ain—is enough to y ; Ar i selves in ghten the public. ? them in power and who do they come up with Ricardo Another uncertainty is the form in whi Nothing but the wrong men. You see, 1 say X. Sullivs N He’ Churnin : the denationalized industry wil a whieh this because I don’t believe Ike or Mac either Marx he ow es 4 fore the state took over last rire ee e= one made their reputations on their own. No, not filmed bai as a , : . : abd ¥ (t this i Thni rivat gum by a long shot. The mothers ahd fathers of thi Nov THE Internal Revenue Bureau scandal is beginning Foren aay. The arn ont Jsed by the great country, who gave their sons and daugh- g PARAI to bite. It has stirred up Secretary of the Treasury oly, but that no private red Hono. ters in war, made their reputations for them, | ag SEN . i: 3 . . a John W. Snyder, the bureau’s boss. Se Suen absolute control of a basic =. —George Smith, 648 S. Meridian St. stars sli tei : : i at dominated the entire national { oO t Many administration spokesmen, including Revenue ,.onomy_ hence a state meno : ‘ , ‘em Yoo For ne star, a : poly was turned . Don’t Push 'em Too Far Chief Dunlap, have been giving off the idea that there as a lesser evil. A GOOD THING . . . By Frederick C. Othman ; { hie we : : : ii i d | MR. EDITOR: were just a few little irregularities, something they coul A . = 5 PARAL handle quite peacefully, thank you. If, indeed, there was New Board T an Goodness Lar the FCC ny Comets vn be ries B34 So he pore esting an 2 t all THERE is now a considerable body of non- ———— This yea: hie public schoo Supp i A as d. Ce you'll was anything wrong a > this h sed hi “oreat Socialist opinion opposed to restoring the old WASHINGTON, Nov, 15—Let us bow low to radio circuit of the machine kept running ail pares A ee ee magazine S has cau im riva: CrOmag + HOV, lo-- i - support these schools whether py s, : Now Mr, Snyder says E fiivate cartel. Thus, The Economist, Probably gay and doff our hats to the Feder i- the time, but the audio circuit was shut off. Catholic, Lutheran or Protestant. Sunday J ish” and has been a “matter of shock and concern the most influential journal published in Bri. y 2 e Fegeral Commun i ne statt : Gl ABPUIS tain and an original opponent of steel tion- Cations Commission. It has saved us from a fate So all the engineer ai the station had to The people who protested should look into to me.” alization, now says: “A el Nalion ood deal w th z 3 do was send along an impulse with the regular their mirrors. The private schools receive no bli “patriotic and honest industry will b ays: privately owned steel 2 8 eal worse than death; namely, the ra- p.q,qcasts. It couldn't be heard; it was so support from taxes and the “screamers’ proSo he asks the public—all “pa - Bo be Jreferabie to the present ar- dio set at home that turns itself on at the whim weak that it hardly could be detected by the test agafhst thelr raising their funds ' citizens”—to tip him off if they have knowledge of irregu- flexible al Epi ee Sxnarsh of ihe fellow downtown at the broadcasting best instruments. For years I have asked that ail private larities in the Internal Revenue Bureau. has prevailed since 1932." her degree than station. You have ‘But it was strong efiough to trip a switch’ schools put their children in the public school id President Truman had ordered “eve M t § ! nothing to do with it. in my set; a switch so delicate the wires were ;,me September without warning. Then watch He also said en an had ord ry ig Or eover it is widely agreed that some of Honest injun. The no thicker than hairs, But it worked. He'd tne “screamfrs” protest when their taxes raise measure possible” to clean up. If so, it is singular that De Zroupip am technical changes taking thing is here, scien- touch a button downtown and my radio in the 100 per cent. The next year the “screamers’
There's good reason now why frau should adore him-— Each payday she orders,
Freedom and Misery
IX ONE more week we will celebrate Thanksgiving Day. The traditional turkey and pumpkin pie will grace most of our tables and when we bow our heads in prayer, there will be much to be thankful for. But we wonder what South Koreans will be thankful for?
I don’t know when a piece of news has given me such cheer,
new “fireballs” are merely cups for the “flying saucers.”
SIDE GLANCES If |
“So we picked up an automobile radio and put it in my house with the coil attached. The
MORE BAD LOANS . . . By Ruth Finney RFC’s in Business Selling Hotels Now
WASHINGTON, 15 —
“sount off.”
A ——————
By Galbraith
Nov. its loss on the project by in- games. Binaggio's murder no to conclude it is
THESE things dim the value of freedom. They temper the thanks with doubt. It is our job to dispell this doubt. We cannot kill our biggest enemy with shells and bombs. Fdr our biggest enemy is tiredness of war and abject acceptance of fate.
: Le a : FEE fii : =
transfer his operations from Missouri tothe West Coast. Binaggio and his godchild, S8am Termini, alias Sam Murray, were going to run the hotel, the Tahoe-Biltmore. The RFC became owner when the hotel went into bankruptcey.
he spent $269,913 on. a residence; on which another $100 000 still was owing at the time of the report. The report continued: “Termini invested heavily in the Tahoe-Biltmore, a gambling establishment built in 1947 on the Nevada side of
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“REFERRING TO Sam Termini again, to account only for the $165,478 in cash which he gave in a single year to one of the contractors employed on his residence, assuming that proper federal and state income taxes had been paid and
> : that profitThe world has chosen this small country as a battle- t The Reconstruction Finance Viting ‘sealed bids for the doubt terminated this project. able.” P | oo - » ground for freedom. They can be thankful there are those { Corp. (RFC) hay offered for Property. i. ros jw months later, the , The RFC In Hts invitation : . » - i - “ i 0 g - § who thought enough of their freedom to stop the advance sale a Lake Tahoe, Nev., lux- THE California Crime Com- jn bankruptcy, and at the pres- par rey EE piobby, of a savage and inhuman foe. ury hotel which was planned Jiasion, in i= Fepors oy es ent time is closed and boarded powder room and Rtighen, { 3" gore: b int oas racketeers, ea at up.” e ! = § But the cost is high. : ny Se Digest gaming join tength with Termini From Pia Yeport used Termini's Wp Rest rooms ! . . 7e 3! 8. ¥ : . X k our '0As long as man has lived on this earth, he has lived ™h te ig f the late | M6 to 1348, while Termini lavish cash expenditures as a suites with path a oo Toom with d th ts of h e quote is from e la was managing various gam- peg on which to base its suilding was Fh A pars : th war an € results of war . . the dead, wounded, Charles Binaggio, Kansas City bling enterprises in a county charge that underworld char- vants’ quarters, on for ney homeless . . . the devastated lands . the terrified and political gangster, murdered* adjoining San Francisco, and acters were not paying enough ! hungry little children. Just as he was planning to receiving one-tenth of the take, federal income taxes, It said:
THE MAGIC OF YOU
OH DARLING mine be ever near . , , to drive my cares
, away . , . my wondrous love,
my dearest girl . , . show me the happy way ... make rain-
£ 5 bows glow . . . by kissing me How can we defeat these things that may well pul y har 104g nehoe. In the summer of that the above payment came te Tas of Srocdem oo ole VE fra ay We a 1 Sows THE CAPITAL National 1949 he was visited there by from income in one year, and + ++ fill all my days with cheer pa or ore this Bank of Sacramento had his godfather, Charles Binag- assuming further that he . + . make dreary hours pass ———— fight is done? loaned it $350,000 under the gio, the recently murdered po- dlafmed exemption for a de- away...and quiet all my fear | We can send more food, more clothing and supplies for er. IRA re 9¢ Ranaas DE ra, and pe Suid t ++ Within you lies the power , : , Mo. can re e calculated tha shelter. We can send help through CARE packages . . . RFC guaranteed 75 per cent “ON THIS ca’ his net ek before taxes 9°... to rule my very life “CARE for Korea.” i of loans made by commercial ; 8 occasion, Binag- .4yiq not have been less than - + . you have the magic touch, ’ : ad: N i banking institutions. This pro- 810 Is reported to have told. gg44 go, my love to ease my pain 5 The 7th District, Indiana Federation of Women’s Clubs gram was in effect from 1945 Nevada authorities that the “If he claimed no family y 2. ya is’ conducting a campaign this Thapksgiving season. If to 1947. Of the $350,000 loaned, purpose of his trip was to 100k exemption, his net income be. a4 Strife a2 so lay with a, ! J : only $10,000 was paid back.” over the Pacific Coast with a fore taxes could not have besn my side ... ma in you want to help a hungry,’ cold, homeless, South Korean yo lonttirs | The Capital National has been view to bankrolling Termini in less than one million dollars. years worthwhile . . , turn sororphan, call IR-4225. | pl eG uu aT ore. taken over by the Anglo Cali-- what would be ‘The biggest “A one-tenth interest in row into happiness . . . by givt save a life in Korea . . . you wp TES h CR . . - fornia National Bank. The gambling joint west of the gambling enterprises in San “ing me your smile. - ay that you wan oy Dyn Pi one is my most artistic pinup—she's got a wonderful tel has been boarded up. And . Rockies,’ the place to be op- ‘Mateo ‘County is no doubt” lu- a) Giri wan : send a CARE )} 8 now, g on PEE profile, all the way down!" fn ~« the RFC is trying to recover erated with ino limit on the = -crative, but it is prepdsterous ~By Ben Bufroughs, > . LT Cw Lea : : . . : . : Sof 2 - 2 . J
