Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 18 September 1942 — Page 13
PS
“BitEss HOUR:
Health ‘Writer Points to - Drop in Production in Britain and Reich. ‘CHICAGO, Sept. 18 (¥. P). —
Government and industry must not
stretch the working day too much under the pressure of wartime demands if they want to maintain maximum production, a writer in Hygeia, the American Medical assoclation publication, said today. Mrs. Miriam Zeller Gross of East Orange, N. J., wrote that increased illness, absenteeism and accidents were blamed on overlong working hours. “With the compulsion of an aliout effort, there is a growing tendency to relax restrictions on hours of labor in this country and at the same time speed up the industrial processes,” she said. x a
British Figures Cited
“It has been pointed out that While the American workman works
Three captains of the special gifts division in the united war fund |9€ campaign discuss their plans to complete their part of the drive before east co the general campaign opens Oct. 5. Feibleman, J. Frank Holmes and Volney H. Brown.
: air force : |eivilian
ON AR RAIDS
Blitzed After Attack by Six Bombers.
LONDON, Sept. 18 (U.P.) —~Radio|who said today that by and large
By JOSEPH L. MYLER United Press Staff Correspondent WASHINGTON, Sept. 18.—Wom-=-
t Ru ing fo
of ‘those affected by the office of price administration’s ruling. “The people with nothing to do,
en who can afford maids—and find|{who just sit: around and get no Radio Pictures Britain as|them—will suffer most from the 65- | exercise, who feel that they are too
degree temperature ceiling decreed for oil-heat homes this winter.
good to work around the house— they may feel the cold,” he said. “It ‘is the womdn who can afford
That is the opinion of Dr. E. R.|5 maid who will suffer most. She'll Coffey of the public health service|just have to put on more clothes.”
Home temperatures of 65 degrees
lin, apparently seeking to offset temperatures of only 65 degrees in|are preferable, from the standpoint Do. of IE» royal | home: homes would be good for a majority'of health, to 80 degrees, said , sald Coffey,’ m
bombing offensive on morale, resorted in its propaganda for home consumption
to distorting minor German raids}
They are, left to right, ‘Isadore Solicitation of
donors already has started and the goal is $1,500,000 to be raised before
the end of the campaign Oct. 23.
against Britain into major air offen-
sives. Official communiques and dispatches from correspondents during the last few days have reported: Tuesday night—only six bombers over England—one of which was stroyed—dropped a few bombs on ast area, causing little damage and a small number of casualties. Wednesday night—A few planes dropped bombs on East Anglia,
. | causing minor damage and no cas-
ualties.
CHANCE
)
who is in charge of the health service’s. sanitary reports and statistics. “Ordinarily for people Just sitting around we recommend only 68 degrees,” he said “But 65 is not too low for those who are active. Children romping around the house are not going to notice the cold. For them 70 would be too warm.” Persons of sedentary habits and fifty-ish folk whose heat-regulating mechanisms ‘no longer - function
properly may feel a trifle chilly. But the average person, if he adjusts himself to 65-degree heat properly, “is not going to notice it,” he said. But will the heat ceiling tend to cause more colds? “On the contrary,” Coffey replied. “There is no reason to believe that a temperature of 66 in the average household will produce
any hazards to health.”
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in $2000 bail. Lynch was arraigned
Tater 2nd held in $2000 bail. Here's What Nazis Say
6 UNDER ARREST AS
fewer hours than his Europeah
brothers in most cases, the work in this country is more exacting and our workmen could not work additional hours at the pace they maintain.” ; Mrs. Gross said Germany had restored the eight-hour working day in spite of needs for greater production and that Great Britain had feduced working schedules. ~ She said the British found that Women working 62 hours a week lost
TIRE BOOTLEGGERS
NEW YORK, Sept. 18 (U.P.).— Six men were under arrest today and a former army colonel surrendered in the government’s roundup of members of what officials described as the largest tire bootleg-
and his brother, Benjamin, oy Brooklyn, were arrested as they unloaded a truck of recapped tires into a store where 45 more of the recapped tires were found. Irwin C. Rutter, chief OPA enforcement officer said four men were arrested and arraigned in Nashville, Tenn. They were members of a taxicab company which allegedly bought tires from the
Berlin's radio version, concocted for home consumption, said: Tuesday night—“Wave after wave of German bombers” heavily attacked Boston, which was described as “an important center of the British armaments industry,” a vital communications center, etc. This was made in the form of a special German high command announcement.
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ing ring operating in the country ring. Bail was set at $2500. The former officer, George A.| Rutter said other arrests would Lynch, Freeport, N. Y. named in|P¢ ade. a complaint charging conspiacy t0| OHIO CONTINUES FAIRS
violate the war powers act, sur-| BEIILEFONTAINE, O. WU. P.)— labor twrnover in plants operating rendered in federal court’ at about Tire shortages and possible gasoon a 10-hour day six times as great|the time Sidney Weiss was ar-{line rationing hotwithstanding, as that in plants on an eight-hour|raigned before U, 8. Commissioner|Ohio’s $2 county and independent ‘day. Garrett W. Cotter. Weiss was held fairs will go on this summer.
Wednesday night—“German bombers. attacked war important industrial and traffic installations on the British east coast with heavy caliber bombs.” Britons were highly amused by the Nazi description of Boston, which is a small seaport of 16,600 population and the headquarters of one deep-sea fishery. :
twice.as much time as those working 40 and that men working 64 hours lost twice as much as those working 54. Mrs. Gross added that the U.S. public health service had found the
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