Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 6 October 1939 — Page 12
"HOOSIER HEADS | NATIONAL MILK
CONTROL GROUP
C. W. Humrickhouse, Other|
Officers Named -as Sessions End. Form a re : The fifth annual convention of ~ the National Association of Milk Control Boards of America was adjourned today by its new president, C. W. Humrickhouse, secretary of the Indiana State Milk Control Board, Indianapolis. A Mr. Humrickhouse was elevated yesterday at the annual election of officers held at the Claypool Hotel where the organization had met for three days. He succeeds Howard G. Eisaman, Harrisburg, Pa., chairman of the Pennsylvania Milk Control Commission. Other Officers Named Others named to office were E. C. C. Woods, Virginia| Milk Control Commission, vice president, and Kenneth F. Fee, director of the Division of Milk Control of the New York State Department of Agriculture, secretary-tveasurer. This will be Mr. Fee's third term. Yesterday, G. A. Norris, Montana Milk Control Board member, and one of the founders of the organization, reviewed the progress of the Association since its first meeting in 1935 at which 11 states were represented.
Uniformity of regulations, accord- |:
ing to Mr. Norris, will enable the industry to solve many of its administrative problems and to. give more efficient and satisfactory serv- « “ice to the consumer. Speaks. for Fair Profits “Sanitary ‘conditions, demanded by state laws, can only be met if the producer makes a profit which will finance the adherence to these regulations,” he said. The duty of the various milk boards, he said, is to set a fair price. so that consumer and producer are both satisfied and betterment of the industry continuous.
"BUFFALO-COW ENDS TOUR COLVILLE, Wash., Oct. 8 (U. P.). —Leland: Wilson and his Catalo, Jumbo, which is a cross between a g w and. a buffalo, have returned m exhibitions in the East. The hi ‘was made by rail.
We don’t consider a ‘customer sold until a second purchase is made.
‘South Side Furn. Co.
932-934 S. Meridian St.
Take a Little Time, SAVE a Lot!
her mixed doubles to tennis.
Girl Grid Player
Out for Good"
prisone |surrendered May 25 after living 19
|three-hour trial . before a ..general
—Times Photo.
Barbara Leggans, 16, nursed a dislocated” elbow today as she registered a. quick kick on the whole business of feminine football. bara was carrying the mail, as the sports writers say, in a game with her brother yesterday when she fell on the sidewalk in front of thé Leggans home, 1405 DeLoss St. In the future, she’s decided to confine |
Bar-
Poles Among Missing at
Hitler Warsaw T empl
BERLIN, Oct. 6.—Adolf Hitler
By JOSEPH W. GRIGG JR. United Press Staff Correspondent *
has had his triumphal entry into
Warsaw, reviewed a two-hour parade of his troops across the city’s ruins,
and returned safely, and not a single Polish citizen has cast eyes on him. The trip was made yesterday by airplane. With other foreign cor-.
All streets the Fuehrer passed had been roped. off. Nobody was permitted out-of-doors, except German soldiers. Every building had been vacated or boarded up. German sentries with fixed bayonets kept all pedestrians at least a block off the parade route. Herr Hitler didn’t see one of his new subjects and not one of them saw him. The Chancellor went directly from the airport to the reviewing stand in the comparatively undamaged diplomatic district, and, after the parade, directly back -to the airport. After he left I toured the city and it was only then that the devastation of Warsaw could be fully realized.
The city is 75 per cent in ruins,
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respondents I was taken along. We saw a wrecked city. But while Herr, Hitler was there, we didn’t see a civilian.
that is, three-fourths of the buildings have been destroyed. There are great bomb craters in the main
buildings and the shells left standing are full of gaping holes: Many buildings .have- collapsed or. burned. Trolley. tracks have been blown loose and twisted into strange designs. Trolleys have been turned on: their sides, surrounded with sandbags and ‘paving stones, torn from the streets, and used as barricades. There are trenches and tank traps all through.the city.
U. S. Embassy Escapes
In the suburbs, brand new villas and ‘apartment’ houses, some not even completed, had been" reduced to smoke-blackened wreckage. In the suburb of Mokotov, German officers showed us a trench : where Polish cadets had held up the:Germans with machine. guns for days, inflicting heavy losses. The : Germans said the defenders had turned every house in that district, into a separate ‘fortress and it had :been necessary to storm every building, floor by floor, room by room, with resultant heavy loss of life. In the center of the city the. Foreign Office -building had been unroofed by a shell.” The National ‘Museum was wrecked but Pilsudski Square, (where the larger hotels are, was only slightly damaged. In: the diplomatic district where Herr Hitler reviewed 15,000 troops, the
United States, Belgium and. Neth-
erlands Embassies were Mrgelly undamaged but the Swedish bassy was half wrecked.
“You See Folly of War”
At ithe airport, ‘before. leaving, Herr: Hitler shook hands with me and other correspondents and said: “Gentlemen, you. see for yourSelves what criminal folly it’'was to to defend this city militarily ond how that defense collapsed aft- » two days.” (According: to the Poles, German troops: laid siege to Warsaw Sept. 8, when advance units were . first driven from the suburbs, and the city surrendered sept. 28. In his Reichstag speech today Herr Hitler said ne siege had mot begun until
SURE, this kid is ready to eat. So ‘watch ‘your child . ... theiway he acts and eats at mealtime, It is not necessary td suggest” that strength ... good health ...and endur.
$6.5. Tonic is great for whetti ng the ‘appetite and in helping buil sturdy health. Further, it helps change
very important step back to health. and we believe that you, like thou.
in praise of it for its part in: n-making you “feel like yourself again.” At all drug stores in two sizes” The larger size represents a saving.0 8.5.8. Ce,
FEIT SY TASTE
{ | FY. gd J]
hido3ii FI iLe
ADD Fis BERGDOLL TERM; 2
Total Now. Is Nearly Eight :
~1f. you need such a tonic, try S:§.8.
3 YEARS TO
After His: Conviction - as Army Deserter.
years as a fugitive, was convicted
yesterday . of desertion and escape]
and sentenced to three years in prison at hard labor. 4The sentence, which followed a
court-martial, will be served after he finishes the five-year term or-
dered after his conviction as a draft|
dodger. The three months of ‘the
five-year term he has served and the|
four months he has been awaiting trial will be credited. Bergdoll planned an appeal. If it
fails, he will be free:by Christmas;|.
1944, ‘if he gets the usual allowance for good behavior. Bergdoll did not testify. He had told his story twice in trying to escape trial on the allegation that the statute of limitations outlawed the charges.
ILLINOIS ROADS sEATTIeED SPRINGFIELD, Ill, Oct. 6 (U. P.)—The State Division of Highways has announced that 473,000 shrubs and 7000 trees have been set out so far this year along Illinois
| spr
roads and highways.
11 POLICE HUNT. COMMUNIST LEADER
Tata, authorities are. Thorez.
- All Communists were boing drivers out of public office and leaders |
if Jesterday specifically to strip the 43
Clan and. ns. here to be ques- \¥! tioned by. ‘military authorities. Zk
tion of his army leave. Mili-| seeking
g| either were srresied or pub, under
br. O. r. GC. A. Manker 's ba
streets. Sides have been sheared off |}
ganda for peace on’ Adolf Hitler's). terms. Parliament: was adjourned deputies . of Jmmunity
Perfect ‘vision 's lo of en n provers loss you of hs i. Accurate Hass Broleckion. hey need.
3 De from amie | oar fran Co.
CALIFORNIA OLIVES or
P). — Local growers attribute My Spanish yar, Which largely wiped Calitorna olives,
——
Cal, Oct. 6 (
=p
the olive per cent increase in
~BTOUT'S FACTORY
MEN’ S WORK |
You can buy cheap work shoes anywhere but quality work shoes are hard to find. We carry a: complete selection of styles and leathers in both oxfords - and regular cut shoes. Practically every one is carried in widths to insure dress shoe comfort in work: shoes.
a “so
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18332 Mass. Ave,
(Second Block)
352-354 W. Wash. St..
STORES OPEN 8 A. M, CLOSE WEEKS DAY 5:30 P. M. OPEN SATURDAY EVENINGS UNTIL IP. M.. SHOE STORES
Tomorrow—SATURDAY LAST DAY OF SALE
% Thanks, folks, for your wonderful response to our sale. We appreciate your friendship and will do everything possible to keep you as friends. To our-friends-to-be, come in—wonderful values await ‘you at terms so easy you can clothe the entire
Jomily: and stay within your budget,
LADIES’ sromt & FUR-TRIMMED
COATS
Unusually . fine values in. the season’s best styles and - . in a choice of fabrics and "colors sufe to please you. Many luxuriously trimmed’
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ANOTHER
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4, 4
AT
52¢ DOWN
50c A WEEK
50c A WEEK
8 1 oz 52¢ DOWN
NEW FALL Le" —LADIES’
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FOR § $252
~ 2 FOR soz
22 pown 250 WEEKLY. |
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FINE QUALITY
HOSE 37%
22¢ Butn—25c W
ANNIVERSARY SPECIALS
for
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GIRLS’ SCH oS
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GIRLS’ COATS
220 Down ame Weekly
362
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42
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2 Fine quality fables fn the season's best stylet Potions to sult every, s
