Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 20 September 1940 — Page 22

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PAE

AMERICANS GIVE

_ You’ re in the R-O. T. C Now

THE TRAILS TIMES

DRAFT TO GIVE

‘[tives ‘of “various branches of the medical profession, have just finished a special three-day conference

have staffs of doctors and nurses who will give tests to those desiring them: All tests will be voluntary—

FRIDAY, SEPT. 20, 1940

tion, ‘health = authorities plan to catch a large number—as yet undetermined—when they appear before

T0 400 GROUPS WITH CHARITIES

i | Deep Into Prckels but metimes Get “Gypped’ By Promoters.

By TOM WOLF | Times Special Writer NEW YORK, Sept. 20.—Ameritans |dig deep into their pockets to give hard-earned dollars to many| a charity deserving neither hope nor faith.

Probably never hefore in the past 20, years has there béen so great a

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Plainfield $1.04 $0.35 $0.69

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There's no waiting for Conscription Day for these boys to get into uniform. Members of the R. O. CALL RILEY 4501 T. C. unit at Shortridge High School, they're lined up at the counter in the historical magazine at Tech High School getting their uniforms. This is distribution week. By tomorrow, 2000 boys at Tech, Short-

Kokomo 4.00 1.38 2.62 ridge, ‘Washington, Manual and Crispus Attucks High Schools will be outfitted from the $150,000 worth

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CH ANCE TO CURB here. They recommended that vol-|up to the point where the man is draft boards. : : the Army. real disease will not be reason for be given to as many as possible of Fai ; ailing to test man - his deferment. SYPHILIS IN U S the 16,500,000 men who must reg- z y jay registia — I : 8 The conference also considered: A program for setting up minii mobilization areas. That includes a : J | | als ily Register Expected to plan for rounding up prostitutes and wore VANE on 23 do pal e, wi th the Have Disease. rants in conseriDlion camp areas E on Indiana Railroad 10-Ride pense of potential conscripts who —Government and local health au-|physical defects” such gs infected thorities prepared today to make tonsils or teeth, herni« and minor Students! - Businessmen! Shoppers! i You'll save real money with these i i medical treatment. It, was under- GS for b i £ since the World War to check up on | oo" t1t Dr. Parran would dis- ; $575 from dure purchased. Next time ) . > or bus. Get there safely and swiftly for compulsory military service. with the American Medical Associ- at one-third the cost of driving! Surgeon General Thomas Parran |ation’s special committee on medical mated that there would be at least| Dr. Paran, announcing the con300,000 cases of syphilis among the |ference’s recommendations, pointed pointed out that during the last war 16,500,000 registrants could be tested syphilis was surpassed only by in-|for syphilis on registration day. disabler of men.: pare for blood tests for -all regisHealth officers from every state |trants, Dr. Paran said that a large

untary blood tests to locate syphilis actually selected for induction into| The fact that a man has a veneister for the draft on Oct. 16. 300,000 of 16,500,000 Who {ation ana communicable diseases in vagrants in conscription camp areas. WASHINGTON, Sept. 20° (U. PJ. are deferred because of “correctable COMMUTATION TICKETS the most of the best opportunity ¢ye afflictions and cannot afford handy commutation tickets. They're venereal diseases when men register |cyss this proposal soon in Chicago go by. Indiana Railroad interurban of the Public Health Service esti-| preparedness. 16,500,000 men who register. He out that only a fraction of the fluenza and actual war injury as a| Despite insufficient time to preand territory, as well as representa-' number of registration Diaces would

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chance that a large per cent of the verage donor’s dollar will not go o the cause he gives to support. \ So. says youngish, handsome Leonard J. Cushing, chief executive'|of the National Information Bureali, The bureau's sole function is the investigation of national Mo) international philanthropic fund | raising organizations and the endonsing of those which meet its “high {minimum standards.” | ERENCH L BOR "400 Groups Raising Funds | |! ] Mr. | Cushing feels the average American stands a good chance of giving |unwisely because of the tremendous number of agencies from erupts whichl|he must choose. Almost 400 : groups are now raising funds for Confederation Leader Says war relief abroad and ‘a new one Class War Ideology springs up every day.” ad Col Americans have always been gen- ollapse erous. | During the last World Wor He pe P ’ period|| from 1914 to 1921, they do-| <xASHINGTON., Sept. 20.—Con- * nated |some $2400, ar fhe vinced that the class war introduced hush Sh = {o| into the national life life of France, a yo all kinds. And the Na- by the Communists was one of the, Seats rari Bureau esti- principal causes of her defeat, ! t bout $10,000,000 to $100,000, France's central confederation of me ol that annually went down labor has now abandoned the the drain of outright fraud. “ideological class struggle.” - Cally for help today are more| TheC.G.T. (Confederation Gennumerous and appealing than ever. erale du Travail) is the French [first six months of the pres-| equivalent of the C. I. O. or A. F.| ent war -Americans responded with of L. 1: i more than $9,800,000. Having rid itself of its Communist The IN. I. B. does not consider | ties after it became clear that Mos] frand [the biggest threat to gifts. |sow and Berlin were in reality part-| It blames perhaps 75 per cent of ners bent on the destruction of the, the wapte on two groups: (1) agen- | French democracy, the C. G. T. has! cies with good Pyenions, i fo.) now revised its constitution; which | efficient | managements; an | proclaimed the necessity of the! 2 2 on ie s Win well ifaniionad | evs struggle, and inserted a a ol serupulous promoters Et LS |bureau has found most Of | feng the sacred rights of labor, the ese . cause will

| of the nation. This defense—a de- | fense of every social category—cannot achieve solid and lasting re-| Suits if it is exercised to the detri- | ment of the prosperity of the coun-! | try as a whole or of the profes sions.’ This is in direct line with what Sl! the well-indorsed National | Leom Jouhaux, head of the C. G, T.,! Soldiers’ League, investi- lsaid in Paris on June 11, three! by Congress in the early gays hefore the Nazis occupied the, || Administrative costs Were | pranch capital. found ave salen. up about $990 po organized labor, he said of every $10 Fa vehemently, cannot exist side by The | National Information Bog side with Hitlerism and Stalinism. ! reau never - starts prosecution of |” ile. the C questionable or fraudulent chari- | e Communists -pretend ee for the working classes,

ties. cause of its heed to protect itself from libel, its reports are Ne continued, they are in fact labor's 8 | deadly enemies.

available only to members—i. e. groups || or individuals who pay BY stirring up class hatred in "Se annual dues of $10. France, he charged, “they prepared

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Disabl gated | 1920s.

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Since] many local charitable’ or- | the ground for the invader.’ | ‘ganizaflpns, including over 400 of | According tq sources within unoec-! the community chests in the major cupied France, Jouhaux is resigning U. S. dities, are members of the | from the C. G. T. - Why is not

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N. I. B|| the average citizen can in- known, but the reason may be yrs The |National Information Bu-| that of the United States, has long as a non-profit educational organ-|other—the C. G. T. U. (Confedera4000 philanthropic organizations, of | The two were bitterly antagonistic. | | The Popular Front was principally | LARGEST SAND DUNE BE REFORESTED re! driving: force was the Commu-| (U. P.)/—Dewey Hill, largest sand | virtually merged with that group. fore the city council are approved. i | political or labor—are under a cloud. ! - They wquld be planted by 500 men or fancied during those. pre-war, Women's 2 9 800 Prs. 900 Prs. $7.49 | : discoltinued styles.

vestigate many appeals through his | mised. reau was established in 1918, at| been split in two. One—the C. G. ization. || During its 22-year exist-| tion General du Travail Unitaire)— which at least half have not meas- | In 1935, France, like Spain, fell {composed of Radical Socialists, : ists.” The C. G. T. forgot its hos- | due on Lake ‘Michigan in this sec-| Today almost all the leaders of; The council has been asked to! It may be that Leon Jouhaux is now and boys at a general field day next | days when France's destiny was be, ] E C FN L S ® ¥ ° 1 ‘Women's Children's . | * Slightly imperfects of $2 and Men's 0

local charity group. The French labor movement, like! the suggestion of Newton D. Baker, | T.—was a socialist gi¥%up, while the ence it has investigated more than | was affiliated with the Communists. ured up| to its lofty standards. hard for the Popular Front. | Socialists and Communists, and its GRAND HAVEN, Mich, Sept. 20] tility toward the Unitaires and] tion, is fio be reforested, if plans be- | that period — whether military, supply 83.000 trees at a-cost of $483. paying the penalty for mistakes real spring. ing forged. 1488 Pai Pairs Discontinued Styles—All Sizes in Lot $3 qualities. Short lots and

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