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Show Public Holding th Bag With Sea Unions Balled Up Merry-Go-Round ·Sauce By Drew Pearson -fthe most important hurdle he WASHINGTON" S. Intelli- to overcome. Wallace and Jefferson gence officials have sent the By Fet«r Edson Slogan of the Henry WallaceitesStandard-Examiner House a highly important report on Soviet operations in Germany is: "Wallace is just as through Correspondent -Marishowing how the Russians have after his fight with Truman and Oct. news dispatches converted large segments of the Byrnes as Thomas Jefferson was WASHINGTON, alto the local news. middle to time the settle dickering old German army to the commu-after his fight with Hamilton and SUNDAY MORNING, OCTOBER and fourth maritime stakes nist banner. 1946 Washington. Jefferson only became Nucleus of the new red-nazi president after that." reveals what a completely balled The Wallaceites are hoping, army is the old German liberatup disunited, jurisdictional mess committee organized by the therefore, that history will repeat Russians when they captured sev- Whether history does repeat--it the ship operators and the manfrequently doesn't--the Wallaceites time unions have got themselves eral thousand nazis at Stalingrad faiths will join in agreeing witt Field People of may have an interesting parallel. Marshal Frederich von with the public, as usual, dowho .surrendered at Stalingrad They've been digging in the hist- into,most tion of President George Albert Smith of the Churchwasofchairman of the bag holding. ing of this committee ory books and here are some Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints that the world .m and appealed by The strikes were called by the radio to the they've produced: army in Germany during the war, George Washington virtually two unions of "supervisory emurging them to desert Hitler and fired Thomas Jefferson from his ployes"--the deck officers and the a come over to the Russians. cabinet in foreign-policy fight,, at the insistence of conservative. licensed engineers. Officers are Sympathy for Soviet organized in the A. F. of L. MasHamilton. Today thousands of Von PaulusAlexander The fight which split Jefferson ks' Mates' and Pilots' associamen and officers have been put and Hamilton concerned a then tion. Needless to say, the head of through Russian indoctrination won't speak to each radical country--France -- just the twoorunions on schools designed to sell them meet in the same room. other feud the Wallace-Truman-Byrnes are sympathy for the Soviet and concerned another radical country, Problem of Existence ready to govern the Soviet zone Russia. Hamilton was reams of treaty texts compiled bitterly op- But both have a Germany. to the new French republic. problemorganizations of existence on their Here are other salient points inposed Jefferson, who had served in hands. During the war, with some the U. S. intelligence report: ambassador, was its militant 5000 merchant ships afloat, each The Russian zone is now as Hamilton read into themanned by an average of five deck the church's 117th semi-annual conference, two-thirds of thethan twice as efficient as champion. fightsa of the French revolution- and five engine room officers, unit as the American ists productive warning against membership of the two organizazone and three times as producJefferson claimed that the tions totaled 50,000. Now there are tive as the British zone, Paris were not a warning only 3000 ships in service and the 2. The Russians are prepared in but a natural number may go down1500. That to set up -a government of their against democracy, of the abuses of a means only 15,000 jobs -available own in Germany the Americans now, half that many later. What and the British set up an autonotoday says the unions are up against Similarly, Wallace mous German government in that is mainan excesses are outgRussian °f tenance of membership, spreadTM who part of the reich. It will rowth of czarist depression. ing the work, providing rotation under Von Paulus. are as President Smith put^ of berths and maximum security. are not retaini- Minimized Suffering "inactive," the wrangling The Russians came to negotiation for When Germans for slave labor as Jelferson, like Wallace, miniwill continue, selfishness will motivate conferees, fear ng with the ship operathese mized the of in things alrhave They people, suffering expected. generally tors, there was a division just as and a half revolutions. Jefferson, wrote: eady sent a million charity among nations. signify a few lives lost sharp as between the two unions. captured nazis from Russia to the "What too bad should be so easy to write the Soviet zone of Germany where in a century or two? The tree There are about 74 major U. S. one year's of liberty must be refreshed fromshipping lines. Forty-four, operpeace for mankind, because there-in The Book. completed Atlantic and Gulf schooling under Soviet and aGerman to time with the blood of.ating from coast, have already granted prefcommunist instructors. Only patriots and tyrants." bei- Jefferson opposed Hamilton on erential union hiring for all lichalf million Germans are ensed officers, and maintenance ng used in labor battalions in Rus- grounds that the conservative These are the leading nazis secretary of the treasury was much membership. West coast opersia. have never done any more Maybe we the Russians know they can't pro-British. Similarly, Wa- ators got meat boy, have we got llace today condemns Byrnes for than "recognize" the officers' either convert or trust. unions. When government concilhis leaning toward England. explanations! Germany Source of War Wallaceites here continue the iators came on deck to restore ordue in U. S. intelligence report President Truman says "the present shortage by pointing out that Jeff-der, they found everyone doing, strongly recommends against an analogy erson, like Wallace, was happiest large part to the extraordinary large slaughter in Julyautonomous German government in his fields (Continued on Page Six) and garden, and was summer was boundAnglo-American zone as prop"the of meat August," and WaLike scientist. agricultural was osed by Secretary Byrnes, and llace, something of a also, he to mean a shortage in the urges instead agreement with the dreamer and kept meterological we seem were to indicate That might short of lives- on the out control of Ger- tables with diligence. that unless Another interesting parallel betpoints But Secretary of Agriculture Anderson, espying amany. agreement is reached, Germany ween Jefferson and Wallace is to the interest of the American again be the source of a the way both men formed strong silver lining, says, -- 6, for the Goose but Poison to the Gander jy^fc . ion for Peace all The Rules , '"' I if rnany 1 stifle It's profess Christianity it, It it they're all still Inedible Explanations haven't but, . that in glut fall." tock. is that It "It is see to markets slowed people war'in the not too distant with farmers in other lands. up temporarily and meat While in Europe, Jefferson sought out varieties of trees, grass, rice to find while 52,000,000 head of cattle and 58,000,000 head Chandler's and olives to be planted in the a are 'chucInsiders big getting of hogs convert 160,000,000 tons of feed into top grade Ex- S. For 23 years thereafter, he kle out of the way Kentucky's received boxes of seed Senator "Happy" Chandler, now annually and pork." from friends overseas. Similarly, of baseball," is taking was Our largest beef cattle population only about 54,5- on John Young Brown, Wallace has collected seeds from South America and Europe, keeps candidate.in 85,000 head, in 1944, according to- figures of Mr. Anderson's up a correspondence with farmown department, so ers of other lands. appears that there's no shortage Brown is the man who Unwanted famous United Nations Happy "swimming the in critters. scandal during the senatorial If the U. N. doesn't get a perMr. Truman says that "the dire predictions of a meat in was 1942, when manent site before its general assa war contractorit built a late this month, it won't embly famine are without basis." But Sen. James Mead, Rep. of charge in Chandler's backbe the fault of Sol Bloom, peppery O. cost of living committee have Adolph Sbabath and a C. 76-year-old chairman of the house nor never Happy forgave foreign affairs committee. " forgot been talking about "the terrifying meat famine," which Brown, as he made Bloom was in a fire-eating mood quite clear when meat packers in creating artif-Brown several friends who when he barged into the White they attribute to "the drive of backed in his successful House- the other day behind fancy shortages" in order to end price controls. vest and flashy walking stick. primary race against Colonel Mr. Anderson, meanwhile, doesn't chide the packers, Ardery wanted complimentary "We've, got to make up our mind serto the baseball world before the assembly meeting or but urges farmers to release their livestock to market tickets take the chance of losing the site ies. ' Kentucky to .some, .other nation," he told abandon their "one-way attitude" toward price control. Thea gentleman from. has stock reply to such President Truman! "If we are to Some labor union leaders feel that another drive' "No--'.'----who supported Brown,show the world that we mean busito get any world seriesness about peace, then we must higher wages is justified because "no effort" is being .going, out of me," he says. find .a home for it." to enforce price control. But an OPA enforcement official Kentucky politicos are President Truman agreed.. "We've Happy may even wasted' too much time," he said. in New York says the black market is getting no "substan-as toifbolt the Democratic "But, Mr. President," continued result.of Brown's vic- Bloom, "we've already found, a tial" portion of available meat, and that the 'situation party asHisa newspaper, the Wood- site, -in Westchester county. New tory. "under better control today than at any other time ford, Ky., Sun, recently announcedYork. A united nations' commit would not support Brown in tee selected it secondary to thi history of the meat enforcement program." the general election and there areConnecticut site that has beer And so goes. Yet the basic facts behind the shortages that the baseball czar hasdropped. I think we ought to start been privately plumping for G, taking over this Westchester prop are comparatively simple, and the basic arguments are O. P. Candidate John Sherman erty by whatever condemnation Cooper of Somerset, Ky., who thrice-familiar. proceeding is necessary." to be a cousin of OPA's'Let's We know that the setup of growers, packers, distribHave a. Fight' Porter. When Truman .pointed out tha Happy has made no utors, retailers and customers hasn't changed since the pre-commitments this probably would .involve an for Cooper, war days when meat could be bought over the counter. unpleasant court case, since sonv Westchester property owners wen is demonstrably true that there are beef cattle No Third Party???? yelling about being evacuated, the his Los new Angeles N. Y. congressman countered: hogs in ample number to feed the country. is likewise speech calling for 'a political "Okeh, then, let's have a fight demonstrably true that meat price control without meat rat- Bartley Crum, west coast None of those property owners ha leader of the Willkie Republicans, a right to object, in my opinion a success. been not has ioning called on Democratic Chairman I am aware that will mean a The big argument is whether, in the face of higher Hannegan in Washington. some of these people to hardship I hear about you have to move, but they ough costs and no subsidies, growers and packers can produce for this a third party?" Hanne-to be unselfish enough to mak( meat profitably under present ceilings. Many growers gan asked. Crum had declared the sacrifice with so much a the foreign policies of the stake. Pretty soon the rest o: that packers say no. President Truman says "present" livestockmajor parties are indistingu- the world will get the idea tha ishable, and that reactionaries are don't want the united nations ceiling are fair and equitable. OPA says amend. running the domestic program of government over here. wrong. the Democrats. "We invited them to come over say anything about a here to set up a permanent gov"I didn't seem to doesn't the get impossible disputing third party, Bob," Crum replied. It still Bloom emphasized second party.ernment," isfora the parties together and work out a solution. But thus far there want 'We've simply got to provide a con vote foreign venient and serviceable site. Lake seems to have been too much charge and countercharge, too Senator Vandenberg. I Success on- Long Island is unsatthe of Franklin conmuch policies feeling, too great a desire on the part of allRoosevelt takes an hour to get and Harry Truman." isfactory--it New York there by train from over cerned to insist that salvation lies only along the path Hannegan, a good friend of So let's begin taking this was much Crum, replied that he Westchester--immedin property their own economic theology. over way disturbed the things iately. When the united nations The meat shortage has continued for too long a time especially the Wallace aff- assembly meets in New York, I we should me in a position arises from a problem that air."I've got to plug away to cleanthink already. We doubt that offer it a permanent home. insoluble enough good will and good sense is applied deadwood here, Bart--that's Truman assured Bloom he woulc our chief goal now," Hannegan think over his proposal and- let energetically to its solution. said. He also told of plans to him know what action was to be bring new men into the adminisbefore the U. N. assembly and how he had sounded it I. icial ' it it It It it ill if No it Surprise to Yugoslavia, Our ambassador ,, Mr. Patterson, tration _ out Franklin D. Roosevelt, Jr., onconvened. (Copyright, 1946, by the Bell the possibility of becoming Syndicate, Inc.) secretary of the navy expresses Franklin, however, was not and Hannegan seemed himself as being shocked at the action of the Belgrade govthat getting new livewires ernment in closing down the American state department's feel come to Washington was about information service in the Yugoslav capital. Actually, the R. BUSINESS move was predictable and should surprise and shock no one. MAN!_ The American information program was charged with You Have Do you know that most Insinciting Yugoslavs to "open treason," apparently because urance Policies on business ^or propaganda line of the gov- Wind Storm it went counter to the official commercial property and equipernment. This charge, too, was one that might readily have ment include what is known as or Wafer Damage an 'Average" or "Co-insurance" ,4 been expected. clause? Last winter three eminent journalists toured Europe Insurance This is a dangerous clause in and reported back on the state of our overseas information your policy, unless you are program at that time. One of the committee, Ralph McGill, Your sure you know what it means. Property? editor of the Atlanta Constitution, pointed out that we In three cases out of four, it BETTER SEE US needed government news to counteract "interpretation" of is wrongly interpreted. commercial news dispatches from America by other governFor instance, you may have $20,000 insurance and have a $10,0ments. 00 loss and yet only collect made adjustments S5000 of the loss. . Apparently this need was met. And our naive declararight here in We will be glad to explain this tion that this was an "information" rather than a "propa- promptly our office. clause as it applies to you and ganda" service--while perhaps a true one--was scarcely certainly without any obligat- M to convince a government 'which neither practices nor believes in the American definition of a free press. INSURANCE The unhappy fate of our information bureau in Yugoslavia points up the inevitable waste of money and effort AGEHCY, ING. Dn a pious government project before any international /agreement had been reached on free access to and exchange Ecc/es B/dg. bf news throughout the world. enough ion. is important in railroading because I've got to be on the alert every minute. I also learned several years ago that cause faulty eyesight could slow me/down headaches and fatigue." What about YOUR eyes? Are they up to the job they must doS E E D R be sure! O R A C O every day? Don't take chances "Good vision ... ... EYE Let the registered optometrist at Anderson Jewelry give you a scientific eye examination. If you do need glasses, buy them on Anderson's convenient Extended P a y m e n Plan. t .- Blackburn-Jones COMPA.NV 319 24V Diol 2-3642 -/ "Men Who Know Insurance" . 2449 WASHINGTON BLVD., OGDEN - EXAMINATION Z E L L E M P L E T |