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p.T e h S e r 2 5 1 9 4 4 T H E N I A G A R A ' F A L L S G A Z E T T E
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i;Owsa Declares.
Roosevelt Will Not Be President
in 1945
By W. D. Gann
WUUan
D. 0«»n, lmc<eii /t i l Hall Strut ovtra'tor
tor me«« »h«n • ««ar<«f 0/ •
etntury, If w«H tnoirn /or *lj r e n a r k o N t propnoifieolioni 0/ K-OTW / lapjxatnpt «J
well (• tr*ni$ tn the Stock tnd Cotnmodttt mtrktti. Ht tj the atthor of m « * y booki
COCtring mtthod$
for
itoek
tnd
commoditf
t rading.
Prom a study of time cycles based ' name contained the "OO" In the
on the repetition of letters and num- j
l
"t name and "O" in t he second
WHAT IT MEANS
CATCHWORDS
By HERMAN R. ALLEN |
W A S H I N a T O N — In the late
summer of 1M3 the Treasury de-
& S & X soldier vote law Is an
M S £ f c ° S * n to the opinion of
i ^ t f i S S d e n t of the United
tbt •JP?»
SWEATS. Wallace, co ncluding an
' ^ & S n 7 tour at Buffalo
^ 4 K $ » cltlien's «Hn-
l t r t W i C V e l e c t i o n of Presi-
J g p S . S i ^ out the soldier
i c t a ^ J ^ i n g t o get some one
: m S T t o me the New York
to
52£rTO t* ballot law. It's a
* 4 ffin* maze and a very In-
-#*gSP»ce& that mm.*
« * £ f f r b « n a s E. Dewey. O.
1 ^TSSdentlal nominee has as-
^ ^ N e w Y o r k bal lo t is the
??™Lg\ppllcatlon form for any
"frS&the union.""
tt
$ 5
:
K ew York political front
« l i K r i a l candidate , dec lared
r ^ - S c a n N eg ro Is being poli-
rJ^ tST l represent, the party of
«.Vft^ntipatrick told a Cattar-
S S k d l d not do the exploiting
t?I*mocratic State Chairman
bers and a recurrence of time per
iods, I determine the possible fu
ture events.
Prom, the time George Washing
ton was President until Woodrow
In 1916 Woodrow Wilson was elected
for the second time.
In 1920 Warren O. Harding was
elected President. Franklin Delano
Roosevelt ran for Vice-President
that year on the Democratic ticket
Wilson was elected, there was n o '
an
d
wa s
defeated. Calvin Coolldge
other President elected with the j
w a s
elected Vice-President in 1920.
first letter of his name beginning,
H
ls name contained "OO.* He be-
with "W." Prom Washington to came President In 1923 after the
McKlnley, there was no President . death of Harding. In 1924 Coolldge
elected who had "OO" In his name. ,
wa s
elected President
McKlnley was elected for the first j i
n
i
92
8 Herbert Hoover was elect-
time i n 1896 and for the second time ed President. His name contained
in 1900, at the e nd of the century
j
• o o . " In 1932. 1936 and 1940
ending in "00." Theodore Roose- j Franklin -Delano Roosevelt was
MWtSffity rally at Olean, that
JS&tUon of war workers, "who
Slrerwhelnung for the Presl-
£,»» but who have moved to new
to&BS,
posed a problem for the
D
?«9rUn Thomas, Socialist can-
tMtii for President, asserted tha t
^ r t record of handling pre-
velt was elected Vice-President, the
first time that "OO" had appeared
in the name of a President or a
Vice-President. In 1904 McKlnley
died and Roosevelt became Presl-
dent
#
I n 1904 Theodore Roosevelt
was elected President, thus repeat
ing the second time the "OO" In a
name of a President.
In 1908 William Howard Taft was
elected President. In 1917 Woodrow
Wilson was elected President. His
elected President of the United
States. His Middle name contained
"O" and the last name "OO."
From t he above, you can see that
from 1920 to 1944 or 14 years. "OO"
has appeared In the name of the
President and that the cycle which
began In 1900 started "OO" in the
name of iht President and has con
tinued 44 years.
Franklin Delano Roosevelt first
took oath of office as President of
J the United States In 1933, a year
war issues, there Is no reason to called by the Ancients as the dou-
accept the indispensablllty of the j ble "3." He will run for office again
3. President Roosevelt, in the
early New Deal days, said some of
his opponents were still back In
i the "horse and buggy" days.
partment submitted to Congress a)
T a b b l
catchwords
proposal for a "Spending* Tax. "It i ~*
would have put .a te n per cent
A
list of catchwords in common
levy on all m o ne y a p W b y tax-'
us
* *
o u l d
°*
e n d l e s s
'
bu t
***•
Io r
payers outside of certain exemp ,
tlons.
such as Interest and Insur- i
G l o o a l
' pro-Bmlsh.
ance payments.
. v j L - ^ i - i : : :
:X
r
Z"rr'*T'
: :;/»£&»:;* • c~£ srqs'&trenaiBraEgsc ^s^mnxi-
Sen. Vandenberg (R-Mlch.) re
marked: "It's the sales tax rose
under another name, but It doesn't
smell as sweet."' His attitude re
flected that of most of Congress.
The idea died.
A few days later a proposal by
Sen. George (D-Ga.) was brought
up.
It called for a five per cent
tax on Individual earnings abore
$12 a week. Its backers called It
the "Victory Tax." It passed with
out much trouble.
Regardless of tlje merits or de
j fun look these over—
Global. pro-British, undemocratic,
i business man. professor, free enter-
i prise, rugged individualism , postwar,
relief. GI Joe, subsidy, bureaucrat.
parity, plowing under.
Do any of them make you see
red. or give you a friendly glow?
j li anybody trying to use them to
sell something to you?
Nelson Read y to
Report on China
WASHINGTON
<A\—
Donald M.
Nelson, chairman of the War Pro-
merits of either proposal, the labels j duction board, prepared today to re
attached to them helped to kill
the Spendlngs Tax and pass the
Victory Tax.
Sales taxes are unpopular.
Anything that will speed victory-
Is popular.
Labels Are Potent
Such labels, or catchwords, often
play a greater part In our national
life—and in the affairs of the world
port to President Roosevelt on a
mission to China in which he sur
veyed the Chinese industrial con
tribution to the United Nations'
war effort.
the
yesterday. He said he was enthus
iastic about China's industrial pro
gress, but declined to comment on
his future in the WPB.
When he left here a month ago,
Beir Bros. .
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11:30 A. M. To 2 P. M.
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Qurt tnd calm it with (00111102
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upset.
* - A NORWICH PRODVCT
Roosevelt administration for the
handling of the peace." Thomas
added that "Governor Dewey has
revealed no significant differences
with the administration on the ba
sis of a lasting peace."
His address was recorded for
broadcast to troops overseas by
army shortwave facilities.
Wallace declared that "some
people say President Roosevelt Is
a tired old man, but I think his
mind is still pretty good. The
great fear of the reactionaries is
that his mind Is awful good."
Earlier, in an interview, Wallace
said that the Democratic party
could accomplish the postwar task
of maintaining the free enterprise
system yet presenting unemploy
ment "better than any reactionary
in 1944. He will not serve a fourth
term, as the cycle for the " O O " has
run out and the Time Cycles and
the Science of Numbers do not
promise for President Roosevelt a
fourth term In office.
From the time Theodore Roosevelt
was elected Vice-President in 1900
to the election of Franklin D. Roose
velt In 1932 was 32 years. Prom the
first election of Theodore Roose
velt to the last election of Franklin
D. Roosevelt in 1940 was 40 years
This cycle indicates the end of the
Roosevelts in the office of President
of the United States.
Seek to Offset Lag
In War Production
SYRACUSE. N. Y. — (UR3 — Plans
were furthered today for Syracuse
—than Is generally realized. In a there were widespread repo rts that
national political campaign it Is'Nelson would not return to the
especially desirable that a label be | WPB. President Roo sevelt said at
recognized as such.
One candidate may say that his
opponent's ideas are "communis
tic"
or "fasclstlc." The thinking
voter will ask himself: "Are they
really? Or is this fellow Just try
ing to knock down the other man
by hanging an unpopular label on
him?"
Here are some examples of how
a label has helped to shape public
opinion:
1
Rep. Martin Dies (D-T ex.l
proposed in 1938 that the House
party'
U. 'a. Senator James M.- Mead
^dedicat ion Day set for Thursday
(D-NY) told the Buffalo group by arm y, navy, war Manpower
that "Roosevelt's experience is
commission and city officials In an
America's best asset." j effort to offset any lag in war pro-
Curran, addressing the Abraham duction arising from the possibility
Lincoln Democracy league on the
eighty-second anniversary of Lin
coln's preliminary emancipation
proclamation, said:
"You have been and are being
politically exploited. You must
have speculated on why a single
controlling political party makes
much of you In one area of the
country x x x while It refuses to
permit you to vote at all In an
other area of the nation."
of an early victory in Europe.
WMC Chairman Paul V. McNutt
and Mrs. Anna M. Rosenberg, re
gional WMC director, will be among
the event's principal speakers.
An audience of 15,000 war workers
and their families Is expected to at
tend the ceremonies at MacArthur
stadium at which the city will re
ceive a special award for its ac
complishments in solving war-pro
duction manpower problems.
the time that Nelson still was WPB i
chairman, but did not commit him- I
self on the future of the agency •
leadership. i
Nelson, before his departure, was
engaged in controversy with repre- j
sentatives of the armed forces over
reconversion policies. The WPB
chairman advocated a system of j
gradual transition to peacetime pro- I
duction—a policy the armed forces
opposed. , i
J. A. Knig took over as acting
chairman of WPB during Nelson 's
. , ...
4
, absence. Krug two davs ago com- l
set up the Special Committee to |
p I e t c d w h a t he t e r m e d a t0
ps lde re-
Investigate Unamerican Activities.
:
organization of the agencv.
The committee was established, and
j Technically, at least. Nelson's re-
has been continued by every Con- • turn leaves K rug without a job. I
gress since. How would it have Krug was named acting chairman i
fared without that word "unameri- for the interim, but during that
can" in Its title? This Ls not to j time he abolished the post of
praise or criticize the committee,' executive vice chairman of WPB. a
but simply to point out the value job formerly held by Charles E. Wil-
of a catchy word if you want to son. Wilson resigned ju st before
put an Idea across. J Nelson left for China, accusing the
2. The "defense era," before Pearl chairman's staff of sniping at him.
Harbor, saw the customary num- " " •'.. - —*
ber of strikes in America. Almost j F r a t e r n i t y to M e e t
automatically, many of these were
labelled "defense strikes." Some
actually Involved plants producing
military goods. In the case of
others It would have taken a long
stretch of Imagination to link them
with such production. The people
opposing them were simply using
: the "defense"' label to influence
1
puBlic opin ion.
The regular meeting of Nu chap- ;
ter, Sigma Psi fraternity, will be'
held this evening at the home of i
Jack Lardie, Fourth street. •
Some 200.000 barrels of Nova
Scotia apple juice fortified with
vitamin C have been sent this sum
mer to Canadian fighting men and
other soldiers overseas.
Here's
a commoner... and a king
Just plain sparrow-he hasn't anything that makes him a col
lector s item. But that blithe canary on your right-he'* worth a cool
$ 100. F or he has the breeding, the training, and certain distinguish
ing qualities which make him an outstander.
So hd and Imperial have something
in
common. Yes, this grand
whiskey has certain distinguishing qualities—a velvety smoothness,
a delightful mellowness that lift it out of the ordinary, that have
made it one of America's outstanding whiskies. Thste the difference.
I M P E R I A L My -vg^g^fer_extra smoothness
8
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• • ' • , \ - * t : . - ' . '• • ' , ' - * - : - ' " . ' • , ' , ' . -
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