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St. Louis Post-Dispatch from St. Louis, Missouri • Page 51

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St. Louis, Missouri
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51
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ST. LOUIS POST-DISPATCH THURSDAY. OCTOBER J. 1950 ST. LOUIS POST-DISPATCH 3.E HARRY CROSBY DIES; Monmouth (111.) College Chemist Winner of 1950 Midwest Award The American Task G.

B. SHAW MAY STAY SEMI-INVALID FOR LIFE WALTER Crisis Psychology LIPPMANN or the Long View? miiiiii iimm guy By Imagination and Resourcefulness the U.S. Can Create a New World Peace. FIRST GEN. BRADLEY and the next day the President himself voiced their fears that the military victory in Korea would cause this country "to let down its guard," in concrete terms that when Congress returns there may be opposition to appropriating the whole of the extra 17 billions which were authorized for next year.

By RALPH E. FLANDERS The following it an abbreviated version of the last ef three lectures delivered by Senator Flanders, Republican, of Vermont, at Harvard University, as the Godkin Lectures for 1950. Under the title ef "The American Century" they have been published by the Harvard University Press. VERYTHING we have been saying until now about our military strength has related to maximum effort of a defensive sort. Yet we must remember that an armament race accelerates itself and has never yet brought peace.

It is a costly and destructive defensive operation without positive values for achieving peace. Its justification is that a line It has its few millions FATHER OF BING, BOB Had Been Active in Family Business Enterprises Since 1933. NORTH HOLLYWOOD, Oct. 5 (AP Harry L. Crosby, father of the Crosby brothers, died at his home yesterday after suffering a heart attack.

He was 79 years old. Bing Crosby, who sped by automobile from his home in Pebble Beach, arrived at the bedside just before his father died. Brothers Larry, Everett, Ted, Bob and sisters, Mrs. Rose Miller of Alameda, and Mrs. Catherine Mullen of Watsonville, Calif, and Mrs.

Harry Crosby were already at the bedside when the end came. The elder Crosby had been active in the Crosby enterprises since 1933 when' he moved here from the family home in Spokane, Wash. He had been ill in recent weeks. Known affectionately in the Crosby organization as "Pop," he supervised Bing's fan mail and handled the checking accounts. He also served as sort of liaison officer between the Crosby offices and Bing.

The Crosby enterprises" encompass such holdings as shares in the Pittsburgh Pirates baseball team, and manufacture of concentrated citrus juice. In New York City the Columbia Broadcasting System said Bing's program last night was cancelled although it previously had been Bing had requested the cancellation because he did not want his voice to be heard over the air the same day of his father's death. FUNERAL SERVICES TOMORROW FOR MRS. OSCAR M. MILLER Funeral services for Mrs.

Oscar M. Miller, president of the Southside Women's Republican Club, will be tomorrow at 2:30 p.m. at the Feutz undertaking establishment, 4828 Natural Bridge avenue. Burial will be in New Picker Cemetery. Mrs.

Miller, 67 years old, died Tuesday at DePaul Hospital, several days after undergoing an operation. She was a member of the Thirteenth Ward Regular Republican Club, and active in party matters for about 25 years. Surviving besides her husband is a brother. William Tanner. She lived at 5231A South Grand boulevard.

DR. F. C. FRY RE-ELECTED HEAD OF UNITED LUTHERAN CHURCH DES MOINES, Oct. 5 'AP) Dr.

Franklin Clark Fry, New Rochelle, N.Y., was re-elected yesterday to a two-year term as president of the United Lutheran Church in America It will be his fourth consecutive term Dr. F. Eppling Reinartz, also of New Rochelle, was re-elected secretary, office he has held for four years. Henry Beisler, Upper Montclair, N.J., was reelected treasurer, an office he has had since 1944. The election took place at the opening session of the seventeenth biennial convention.

cmr SELECT FOODS This is not an Inspiring picture of the American people. It is in fact an expression of deep distrustof the notion that in these issues of life and death the people can be counted upon only if they are in a condition If of perpetual frenzy. If this estimate of them turns out to be in any degree true, it will be because the people are being badly led. Bradley. It will be because their responsible leaders have shrunk from the task of informing and persuading, of educating and convincing them.

It will be because instead of leading the people the Administration spokesmen have relied upon the bastard art of manipulating opinion by sloganeering and shock. If it is at all true' that the national decisions taken last summer were not serious, and might be revoked next winter, then the President and his cabinet should search their consciences, asking themselves how often they have come out from behind their announcements- and declarations to talk with, not merely to talk to, the people. In Arms for Years. Naturally enough, therefore, when the worst fears did not materialize, the tendency was very strong not only in Congress but also in the White House itself to relapse into pleasanter and less strenuous ways. Thus we drifted down from the stern exactions of the military state to the easy benefits of the welfare state.

That was how the impulse to rearm, which was incited by the Czechoslovak crisis fizzled out in poor Louis Johnson's economies. It is not going to be possible for this country to defend its interests and to do its duty in the world unless our people will support steadfastly 'and with substantial unity of purpose a large military establishment for many years to come. But it is also true that this long and sustained effort cannot be had by relying upon the psychology of recurrent crises. If the race is to be a long one, then the attempt to sprint the whole way will soon end in a breakdown. If they will talk with the people, they will not have to lie awake nights worrying whether a military victory in Korea might cause us to disarm, or to quake and shudder lest Mr.

Vishinsky deprive us of the daily injection of truculence to which Mr. Malik treated us. Not for Koreans. The American people are quite capable of understanding that the extra .17 billion dollars were not authorized in order that we might defeat the North Korean army. They are no less capable of un derstanding that the defeat of the North Korean army is not the end of the great struggle.

They are not" likely to confuse the defeat and the dissolution of that little army with the unconditional surrender of Germany and Japan, nor arc they likely to allow their gratitude and relief at the outcome to cause them to forget the critical fact that our Navy and our Air Force were unopposed. The big question, which under lies the anxieties that Gen. Bradley and others are expressing, is whether to act as if we are on the verge of total war or as if we are engaged in a long struggle which could break down into total war but may not and need not. Since 1947 the Administration has based its dealings with the public and with the Congress on the cry of imminent disaster.that only emergency action could avert. The Truman Doctrine, in large degree through not wholly the Marshall Plan, and of course the Atlantic Pact and military aid.

have been presented as emergency measures for a crisis. All of them in fact were measures requiring years in which to achieve their real purpose. After Scares, Headaches. "The method and manner of American defense and diplomacy are now decisive," said The London Economist the other day. ln every capital in the free world.

It is well to be perfectly clear about the task on which the free nations are engaged. It is a Ion ft task which may last out this generation." In the free 'world a task which may last out this generation will not be carried out if the people are presumed to be able to act only when they are frightened. It will be carried out only if the people are treated by their leaders as adult free men who. when the matter is fully explained to them, will make up their minds, and having made them up will keep them made up. Explaining It all for the purpose of reaching that kind of conviction takes time, it takes trouble, and it requires leaders who really trust the people.

No doubt, if one is in a terrible hurry and if one does not want to take a lot of trouble, and if all the reasons are not perfectly clear, the quickest and easiest way to get something done is to scare the country and to stampede Congress. The trouble with this technique, apart from its cynical immorality, is that, like getting drunk, it is tremendous while it lasts but in the hangover there come all th things that the President and Gen. Bradley are worrying about. DEImar 7900 Open Men. and Frl.

on a A o.ia p.m. lev mw ww Other Deyt, 9:30 A.M. te 1:30 P.M. 2D'95c 37 LBS. 12' LB.

6 f- 29c FRUIT NUT STOLLEN COFFEE CAKE THESE TODAY 75 2f 1 Prof. William Haldeman First to Be Selected for Contributions to Field of Education. Prof. William S. Haldeman of Monmouth (111.) College, who has combined inspirational teaching with personal loans aggregating thousands of dollars to make graduate study possible for his students, has been named winner of the 1950 Midwest Award for achievement in chemistry.

4 He is the first winner to be selected for contributions in the field of education rather than in research, it was explained by Dr. A. H. Homeyer, head of the American Chemical Society's St. Louis section.

The prize "a gold medallion conferred annually by the St. Louis group on a Midwestern scientist for advancement of chemistry or chemical education is to be presented at a dinner meeting at Hotel Sheraton on Nov. 6. Department Head Since 1918. Prof.

Haldeman, who is 69 years old, has headed the chemistry department of the small college, 190 miles north of St. Louis, since 1918. His department has graduated 343 students in the 32-year period, and no less than 88 students have gone on to obtain their doctor's degree. In his 1947 report on manpower for research, Dr. John R.

Steelman cited Monmouth's record to President Truman in emphasizing the importance of small colleges. Avoiding any semblance of high-pressure salesmanship. Prof. Haldeman stimulates his students' interest by giving them special articles to read or suggesting novel chemical reactions to check. Furthermore, he helps his stu dents plan their future.

Aside from lending them money from his own limited funds, he helps them obtain fellowships and teaching appointments, follows their careers and periodically pub- STEVENSON OPENS CAMPAIGN TO BUY LINCOLN LETTERS CHICAGO, Oct. 5 (AP) Gov. Adlai Stevenson said last night the Oliver R. Barrett collection of Lincolnania "belongs in this state and it is unthinkable that it could be dissipated." The Governor spoke at a dinner of the Chicago Club. It was the opening of a campaign to raise $220,000 by public subscription to buy the collection for the Illinois State Historical Society in Springfield.

Barrett, a Chicago attorney, spent much of his life collecting rare letters and documents written by and pertaining to Abraham Lincoln. "We should maintain this reminder of our past," the Governor said. "I believe it can be accomplished for the people of Illinois." Stevenson told of setting up a statewide committee in an effort to keep the collection in Lincoln's home town, Springfield. Co-chairmen are Newton C. Farr of Chicago and David B.

Owen, president of Bradley University in Peoria. The committee is sponsoring the exhibit of a part of the Barrett collection traveling to many downstate cities on the Illinois Central Railroad. EDDIE CANTOR COMING HERE NEXT WEEK FOR 3-DAY REST Eddie Cantor, the radio and movie comedian, plans to come to St. Louis next week for a three-day rest, he announced in New York yesterday. He will stay at the home of his friend, Arthur B.

Baer, president of Stix, Baer Fuller who lives at 9425 Ladue road, Ladue. Cantor, who is giving shows in a number of cities, is canceling part of his tour, and plans to come to St. Louis after an appearance next Wednesday in Toronto, Canada. I i TAKES roil i TO I 0 Tht only scheduled U.S. airiint offerinf direct servict I Playwright Released From Hospital to Keep Him From Being Depressed.

England, Oct 5 (UP) George Bernard Shaw left for his 'home at Ayot St. Lawrence yesterday after 23 days in a hospital and it was feared that he will be a semi-invalid for the rest of his life. Shaw's departure caused such stir that it made him chuckle. Just before he was placed in the ambulance on a stretcher, he looked toward the hospital, saw all the newspapermen, noted that the hospital patients and staff were peering at him from windows, and almost laughed aloud. The 94-year-old playwright still is under strict medical supervision.

His doctors would have preferred to keep him in the hospital but they feared that he was becoming depressed by his long stay. Shaw's fractured thighbone has been healing rapidly but his bladder condition, which flared up after the leg operation, will require continued treatment and may keep him a semi-invalid. The playwright has been insistent on a return to his home. He has said that, if he is to recover, he will do it more quickly there; or, alternatively, he will spend his last days in familiar and happier surroundings. OUR LAHY OF GOOD COUNSEL CATHOUC CHURCH BEING RAZED A 56-year-old North St.

Louis landmark, Our Lady of Good Counsel Catholic Church, on the southwest corner of North Eleventh and Destrehan streets, is being razed today. According to Dr. William E. Swekosky, an authority on old buildings here, the cornerstone was laid on June 3, 1894, by the Rev. J.

McCaffery. It was established because many of the Irish Catholics in that area were reluctant to mingle with the so-called "Dutch" in the Holy Trinity Catholic parish a few blocks away, Dr. Swekosky said. The Our Lady of Good Counsel parish covered only a few blocks in the immediate vicinity of the church. The structure was sold Aug.

30 by Archbishop Joseph E. Ritter to David Markovitz who is razing it. Dr. Swekosky added. DR.

THOMAS P. WILSON DIES, VETERAN OF WORLD WAR II Dr. Thomas P. Wilson, physician and World War II veteran, died last night of a heart attack at his home at 7515 Harter avenue, Richmond Heights. He was 45 years old.

Dr. Wilson served In the Medi cal Corps in Africa and Italy dur ing the war and was attached to the 835th Engineers Aviation Bat talion. He graduated from Sol-dan High School and the Washington University School of Medicine. Surviving are his wife, Mrs. Betty Richards Wilson; a son Tommy, a daughter, Pat.

and a sister, Mrs. Perry Griffin. Funeral services will be Saturday at 10 a.m. at the Lupton undertaking establishment. 7233 Delmar boulevard, University City, with burial in Valhalla Cemetery.

CHARLES R. UNDERHILL DIES; INVENTED WIRELESS PRINTER LOWER BANK, N.J.. Oct. 5 (AP) Charles Reginald Underbill, credited with inventing the wireless telegraph printing system, died at his home here yesterday. He was 75 years old.

Underhill did not attend college because of deafness and was largely self-educated. He lectured in leading American universities and colleges on electromagnetism, and wrote a number of books on the subject. His best known is a complex device which receives wireless messages, printing them directly in the letters of the English alphabet instead of dots and dashes. He invented other "signaling and telegraphic devices and discovered the connection between electric resistivity and the heat content of metals. NUMBER OF NEW POLIO CASES IN U.S.

DROPS 8 PCT. IN WEEK WASHINGTON, Oct. 5 (UP) The Public Health Service reported today that the number of new cases of acute poliomyelitis in the United States declined last week for the first time since May 20. The service said 1994 new cases were reported in the week ended Sept. 30, an 8 per cent drop from the 2170 cases of the preceding week, which was the peak week of 1950.

Since the start of the current "disease year" which begins with the twelfth week of the calendar year there have been 20,405 acute cases of poliomyelitis, compared with a record 32,204 cases in the last disease year. of defense may be held until i means of achieving peace have been devised. Our objective here is to see if anything i- tive can be toward ing peace We are looking role in contem porary history which is some Flanders. from that of thing different the wearied and plodding Titan oppressed with the burdens of humanity. We must be something other than a modern Atlas sustaining the weight of the world on his shoulders.

We must find some field of action which does not involve strained effort in an ultimately hopeless cause. What can we devise in the way of constructive contribution to our own welfare and that of other peoples? WHAT we have to do is to recognize the universal desire for peace among people as distinguished from their governments. We have to find some way to make this desire an effective force in maintaining peace. Our billions upon billions of expenditures on defense are wasted and meaningless if they are considered as the ultimate solution. They can only hold the line while we search for, find, and apply the solution of organizing the desire for peace among the peoples of the earth into an effective political instrument.

That we should run wild in the one course and only feebly and incidentally apply ourselves to the other is incomprehensible. rw HERE are 'two Sroups of i I neoDie with whom we establish contact. One comprises the populations of the satellite countries. The other croup is composed of the people of Russia itself, whom it will be difficult to reach and, when reached, more difficult to establish communication with on lines of mutual comprehension. Means must be found.

First, we must make clear to the peoples of the satellite countries the situation in which the world finds itself. We must make clear that the destructive tide of conquest which has rolled over them must be stopped and rolled back should the attempt be made to advance further. We must make clear to them just what dangers and hardships they will have to undergo and what means we wilt take to make those hardships as light as possible. One of the things we must tell them is that the atomic bomb is incredibly destructive, but that we are holding it in reserve for retaliation only. Even in retaliation we will not use it against conquered and enslaved popula tions Th must however, be readv i ui tombing which destroys their w4- industries and destroys their transportation.

I Understanding what we have to do and plan to do, there will te no such surge of devoted and self-sacrificing patriotism as fired the English and the Germans to repair damage and continue production under impossible circumstances of daily and nightly attack, material destruction, and Imminent death. We can make JUear to these people that we will not be lighting against them; we will be fighting for them. FOR the Russian people themselves less informed habitually enslaved for as long as their memories and traditions stretch back into the past we have somewhat different message. We can, by suitable means, un settle their confidence In the ami- done A achiev- yf'i then, 1 for a I 1V it PROF. W.

S. HALDEMAN lishes an alumni directory at his own expense. The teacher does without an automobile so he can have money to help worthy students, and sometimes borrows himself when loan funds run short. He is proud of the fact that, of all the recipients of loans, not one has failed to repay him. Holds Several Patents.

Prof. Haldeman has directed research in numerous fields, and is the co-holder of several patents connected with oxidation of ewyi juranoi. ufc ne uimseu nas never attained the doctorate, More than once he has been offered an honorary doctor's de gree, but he invariably turned it down; feeling that this sort of thing dims the luster of the earned degree. A farmer's son who had to go to work as soon as he finished elementary school, he was 33 years old before he obtained his Bachelor of Science degree, and 39 when he got his master's. Lack of money prevented him from getting the Ph.D and Prof.

Haldeman is determined that no worthy student of his will suffer such frustration if it can be helped. Tomorrow's Events 12 noon Sales Managers' Bureau of Chamber of Commerce entertains members of St. Louis Flyers hockey team at luncheon at Hotel Statler. 6:30 p.m. J.

Howard McGrath, United States Attorney General, speaks at dinner on program of three-day meeting of Missouri Bar, at Hotel Jefferson. 8 p.m. Edgar Anderson, geneticist, gives illustrated lecture on tropical herbs at Horticulture Society meeting, at Missouri Botanical (Shaw's) Garden, 2315 Tower Grove avenue. MARGARET TRUMAN ESCORT TO WED A MISSOURI GIRL YPSILANTL Oct. 5 (UP) Frank G.

Handy, who once was reported to be engaged to Mar garet Truman, is going to marry a Missouri girl all right but not the President's daughter. Handy, son of a Ypsilanti pub lisher, said he will marry Betty Jean Goshorn, daughter of Robert C. -Goshorn, Jefferson City (Mo.) publisher, Oct. 11. Miss Truman and Handy started rumors flying last year when they attended several Detroit parties together while she was on a concert tour.

Handy said he found his bride-to-be in Chicago at a newspaper convention. BOB HOPE ON WAY TO KOREA BURBANK, Calif, Oct. 5 (AP) Bob Hope and a troupe of more than 40 persons are on their way to entertain service men in the Korean war zone. Hope left from Lockheed Air Terminal last night aboard an Air Force plane. Jane Russell will join the troupe later during the three and a half week tour.

Savt up to 17 on TWA's Thrift Season Plan Eajoy laxurioua TWA Sky-liner rvic at new low round-trip fara. Or you can bring Iovd odm ber, and pay their expenses, under TWA's "prepaid" plan. See yew frevef egenf mr cell fWA.1 pArfield 0f4S of dollars in support. But this is only one of the ways of getting through the curtain. Another is the seemingly ridiculous device of the free balloon, dropping pictures and simple reading matter at intervals as it floats over the enormous area of European Russia.

Let us not minimize the possibilities of this means of setting information over the curtain. Our Department of State does not look with favor on balloons and other unconventional means of Retting in touch with people on the other tide of the barrier. They have the idea that it will be construed as an invasion of sovereignty by the Russian Government. Through some queer quirk of diplomatic reasoning, it is no invasion to shoot our words across on electromagnetic waves in the ether, but it is not quite cricket to send printed material across. That is a little too unconventional.

In some way it is rather raw. It is not in accordance with the niceties of diplomatic practice. ELL, let us set a precedent. A nation like ours which re signed itself to and prac ticed mass bombing in the last years of the war need not be fussily hesitant to try something new in the interests of peace. The nation which devised and dropped on the citizens of Japan the devastating atomic bmb makes itself ridiculous when it hesitates at any means of assuring the peoples under the yoke of our potential enemies that we have no quarrel with them.

Let's get at this and get at it soon. Technically the means are at hand. The apparatus is simple; the cost is low; and God has directed the winds in our favor. There are thousands of dis- jn finfr nails and pat in! thir nean.5 out. xncy win uii'iei hardships; they will undergo the dangers of death If only they might make some contribution to relieving their own peoples from the crushing burden of totalitarian tyranny.

RETURNING to a consideration of the powerful intang- uic -a ici.cui vioiiui iiiauc a suggestion which seems to me to be exceedingly valuable. I hope will be followed up. It is the idea that the American people should get in touch with the people behind the Iron Curtain and that the contact should not be left entirely to governmental endeavor which, as we know, is faint-hearted and unimaginative when it comes to anything except the piling up of armament on armament. The proposal is that a wide spread contribution of small amounts of money by millions of Americans should be made to support the undertaking of ring ing the satellite nations with a wall of good will expressed in the most persuasive terms of modern advertising. We can pile up this advertis- ing material behind the iron Cur- tain.

More significantly than that, ve can Plant the ideas and ideals deep in the hearts of the people on our sine 01 me curiam These by no means exhaust the possible methods of getting through the Iron Curtain. They are the obvious ones. To explore this subject completely in a public address would be most unwise. Much of what can be done depends on secrecy for its successful accomplishment. IN THE last two thousand years there have two periods in which the peoples of the known world have enjoyed the blessings of peace.

The first peace of this sort has taken the name of the "Pax Roman. The second period, extended roughly over the one hundred years between Waterloo and the first world war has been re- But even then we must not give up the Air Force. It must be strong. It must be ready. It must be in plain sight of any who again endeavor to conquer other peoples and destroy the peace of the world.

It will not be a hair-trigger Air Force. It will not go into instant action on the threat of trouble, any more than was the case with the British Navy. Its strength lies in its existence. It is not too fantastic to think of it as an air cover under whose protection the United Nations proceeds with its difficult processes of organizing the machinery of intergovernmental co-operation and peace. This, not the balance of power, is our program of action.

Under that aerial cover international co-operation can work more confidently, with less stress and strain, with the threat of destruction removed. The nations can think calmly, plan wisely, and work effectively. Our own prosperity and peace, the prosperity and peace of the world, will be served by this "Pax THE FRESHEST VEGETABLES AND THE MOST DELICIOUS FRUITS! FROM ALL PARTS OF THE COUNTRY OUR BUYER BRINGS THE CHOICEST AND PRICES THEM TO PLEASE THE DISCRIMINATING AS WELL AS THE THRIFTY SHOPPERS COME IN OR CALL IN TODAYI CALIFORNIA VALENCIA ORANGES LARGE FRUIT OF FINEST QUALITY FULL OF SWEET JUICE START THE DAY RIGHT WITH A BIG GLASS BEANS RUSSET POTATOES WASHED IDAHO CROP LBS. FRESH GREEN EXTRA TENDER. CRISP AND STRINGLESS JUMBO PASCAL EXTRA SELECT.

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Stop in soon. Western World have no desire to conquer their territories or take from them anything that is theirs. It is the Russian government, not the Russian people, that is the enemy of the Western World. This propaganda if propaganda it is to be called, has the powerful advantage of being the truth. We do not have to deceive.

We do not have to persuade against better judgment. We have to state as simply and as directly as possible the truth as it is. and we will find it meeting with a response deep In the hearts of those to whom it is addressed. BUT some one will say this is all moonshine. What about the Iron Curtain? It is incredible that we have been so prodigal in the merely defensive matters of armament and have been so hesitating, so backward, so unenterprising, so unimaginative, in this matter of piercing the Iron Curtian.

After Inexplicable faltering and misunderstanding, our Congress has finally accepted the potential usefulness of the Voice of OUR STRAWBERRY ICE CREAM FROM PURE. SWEET CREAM AND LUSCIOUS BERRIES PACKED OR DELIVERED QUART IU Tllhoooo op PAKKSIDE STORE 302 N. KINGSHIGHWAY ROSEDALE U4e PLAZA STORE 212 FORSYTH BLVO. DELMAR 2121 DELIVERY SERVICE Boatmen's RATIONAL BANK eoAOWAY ttm ouvt St. lour tmo.

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