AFL-UAW truce may lead way to labor peace
No raids for duration, is pledge signed by two groups
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Service journal predicts Roosevelt will act
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Patchwork job does more harm than good, says young GOP leader who regrets that steps have been delayed
By Senator Joseph H. Ball (R-MN)
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Edison: Administration keeps Hague alive with patronage
By Lyle C. Wilson, United Press staff writer
Washington – (Jan. 8)
Charges that the Roosevelt administration was keeping the Hague machine alive in New Jersey with feedings of federal patronage were being assayed here today in terms of presidential year politics.
Governor Charles Edison, retiring Democrat, who was formerly a member of President Roosevelt’s Cabinet, made the charges yesterday in citing the appointment of Dr. Edward J. Jennings, a Hague man, to be postmaster at Trenton despite opposition by the non-Hague element of the state Democratic organization.
At a Trenton press conference, Mr. Edison said that without such federal patronage, Mayor Hague “would have been a dead duck long ago – in fact that is all he is living on now.”
The policy of appeasing Mayor Hague has been cited by anti-Roosevelt Democrats and Republicans as an indication that the President intended to seek a fourth term since it is to be expected that the Mayor will control the New Jersey delegation to the Democratic National Convention this year.
Mr. Edison’s pointed complaint gives Republicans some useful presidential year arguments in support of their frequent charge that the Roosevelt administration is or has been aligned with questionable political machines in several large cities including New York, Chicago, Kansas City, Memphis and Jersey City.
Chicago, Illinois (UP) – (Jan. 8)
Harrison Spangler, chairman of the Republican National Committee, said today the party will probably not shorten its wartime presidential campaign because “we believe the Democrats are already conducting theirs.”
Mr. Spangler said the National Committee, which begins a two-day meeting here Monday, will probably set the date for the national GOP convention in June, “around the usual time.” A campaign of the usual duration, he said, would not interfere with the war effort if it is conducted properly.
Meanwhile, observers speculated significance on a statement by Wendell Willkie, who said in New York that he was interested in no particular city as convention site. Mr. Willkie’s followers have opposed selection of Chicago as the convention site, observers said, in the belief the city is a stronghold of isolationist sentiment.
Observers speculated on whether Mr. Willkie regarded it as good strategy to appear disinterested, or whether he believes it would be useless to oppose sentiment for holding the convention here. Chicago will bid for both the Democratic and Republican conventions.
Labor Secretary blueprints plan in yearly report to Congress
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Allowance for child of serviceman now will be retroactive to first of month in which baby is born
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Cape Gloucester invaders push ahead mile and three-quarters
By Don Caswell, United Press staff writer
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Paul says measure is ineffective as means of controlling war profits; backs simplified tax form
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Funds may be cushion for post-war jobs
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If metal comes off the critical list soon, it will make liar out of somebody
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Department fears output of war material will be impaired
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Baruch report called ‘preliminary step for demobilization’
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Don’t say things that might seem funny to you but are irritating and even insulting to them under strain of wartime separation
By Ruth Millett
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America, Britain trying to reconcile Allies in controversy
By Carroll Binder, foreign editor of The Chicago Daily News
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Wondrous new world of the speedy Yanks leave Koran-reading East cold, Pasha tells correspondent
By Henry J. Taylor, Scripps-Howard staff writer
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