Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 28 August 1942 — Page 7

| Robert McCool To End Furlough

With six weeks’ training’ to his | credit, Robert F. McCool; apprentice seaman, : > to be “shi: ed Accidents No be snipped \ i ter he returns to i Great Lakes training school to-

July Toll of ~ On Highway Lowest

“expects!

Since 1926.

., : Times Special 5 CHICAG , Aug. 28.—Hoosier mo-

{ torists have been more careful on

ie ‘highways this year and have assisted largely in establishing al

‘national reduction in fatalities. The national safety council reported a drop of 17 per cent in . traffic ‘deaths during the seven ~ months of this year and credited Indiana with a 19 per cent drop. + ~ For the second consecutive month, i July showed a decrease of 30 per cent and established the lowest toll since 1926. The national highway toll was 2300 in July.

Warn Against Complacency

© Warning against a complacent attitude in view of the current re- . ductions, the council insisted that . at" the present rate 30,000 would . lose their lives on the highways “Of this 30,000, it is likely that 18,000 will be workers sorely needed in the war production program— many of them key men or military leaders who cannot be replaced,” the council said. So far this year, 16,870 persons have lost their lives in highway ac-

morrow. He is spending the furlough with his

Mrs. Fred G. McCool, 2032 E. New York st. His'fathRobert McCool or is 5 pressman at The Times. Robert attended Technical high school ‘and: before he enlisted July 7 he was employed by the Lieber Blueprint Co

BRITISH WOMEN ARE OUT TO WIN

Millions Aiding War Effort By Working in Offices And Factories.

By CARROLL BINDER

Copyright, 1942, by The Indianapolis Times nd The Chicago Daily N Inc.

LORDON, Aug. 28.—An Ken of the extent to which women are contributing to Britain’s war effort is

A

tressing nasal ‘disease; ozena or

‘parents, Mr. and]

USE HORMONE BANKS T0 TREAT DISEASE

By Science Service LOS ANGELES—Female sex hormone “banks” established by bury

ing pills of sex hormones in the fat over the abdomen, are the latest method of ‘treating the very dis-

Sroveméat tollowing. this treatment in 13 out of 20 womén and one of four mien is reported by Dr. Lloyd K. Rosenvold of College of Medical

| Evangelists here, in the archives of|

otolaryngology. Wasting of the lining of hb nose with discharge, crusting and foul odor are the symptoms of this disease. Female sex hormone treatment in which the hormone prep-

i ee has ‘been bed ‘with some success for the past five years, Yol-| lowing experiments by scientists in| this countiy, Canada and France. Advantage of the “bank” method |. is that enough hormone to last for ‘many months can be given at a| single operation. Improvement in

the ozena patients, Dr. Rosenvold|

reports, seems to last from four

months to almost two years.

_ Iduction speedup, assist public affairs

OF SONS IN SERVICE TO ELECT

Officers of the newly organized Fathers of Sons in Service will bef, elected at 1 p. m. Sunday at a meet-

ing at the War Memorial. The association was organized by local fathers to assist in war pro-

ests and develop post-war job see curity. :

members; is ‘headed ‘by ‘these tem-

Jarvis, Fred Philpott, Fred Mackey, Leon : Scherrer and .C. R. -Heman.,

in all war effort, to assist in civilian] the srvios defense and to protect sons’ inter- Susdays mest, s

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afforded by the estimate that 5,50C,000 women are fully employed in factories and offices and 2,000,000 others are working part time in industry and home-making the remainder of the time. War industries are benefiting greatly from this part-time labor. and it is being increased.

fcidents. For the first seven months of last year, 20,310 were killed."

Driving More Carefully The council believed that the part curtailment of car use and rationing can play in helping re- . duce accidents apparently was ap- ~ proaching ite peak, since the July

reduction was no greater ‘than in June. It was the council’s opinion that motorists were not only driving less, but they were driving more carefully to save tires, cars and gasoline, MORRIS HEADS LAWYERS “DETROIT, Aug. 28 (U. PJ. ‘George M. Morris of Washington, D. C., was named president of the American Bar Association as the group’s 65th annual meeting closed

Seventy-five . per cent of the

workers in certain factories-I visited are women, 40 to 50 per cent women plant making enormous guns, tanks and shells had 30 per cent women workers.

in other factories. One

Pay High Incomz Taxes Wages are high by British pre-

war and army standards, but when income taxes and wartime living

costs are considered, the balance left to most workers, except dockers and certain highly skilled mechanics working tremendous overtime, is not as great as a layman imagines. The average wage for 16 major groups of industries is $20 weekly,

1of which $4 is deducted for income

tax for a single person, and which. is the highest sum a married person with two children can earn without paying a tax. I found many men and women working hard for $12 to $16 a week. Some of them have contributed generously to buy Spitfires for the air force as well as to Russian relief.

Put Shoulders to Wheel

~ I have toured the country’s vital areas since the first of August and as my sojourn in Britain draws to a close I am deeply impressed by

| the manner in which all classes are

putting their shoulders to the wheel of war effort regardless of boredom with a particular task, of fatigue arising out of prolonged preoccupation and abnormal responsibilities. It is a contribution worthy of the admiration of such comparative

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newcomers to the war effort as ourselves. The picture would not be complete, however, without mention of the fact that the London Times and other serious journals have devoted considerable space recently to criticism of alleged shirking by two important groups of workers—Liverpool dock workers and miners,

Coal Industry Important

The visiting foreigner cannot evaluate such criticisms, but decrease in coal production is sufficiently alarming to cause the leaders of the miners’ union to appeal to their constituents to increase individual daily output, work more [regularly and avoid = unnecessary stoppages. If British industries, utilities and homes should suffer from a serious lack of coal, the whole war effort would be impeded, so the productivity of the coal industry is of more than ordinary importance. Meantime, it is encouraging to note that Britain, in her 36th month of war, has fewer production bottlenecks than the United States in her ninth month.

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SPONSOR CARD PARTY

The Burns-West Striebeck post of the Veterans of Foreign Wars and its auxiliary will sponsor a card party at 8:30 p. m. tomorrow at Denny and E. Washington- sis.

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