Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 3 November 1942 — Page 6
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“Joins WPS__PARRAN 10 TESTIFY [Troop 83 Scout Commandos Will Be Awarded Rank of Major
ON DOCTORS’ ROLE Governor Henry F. Schricker will] under the. direction of the board of . award the rank of major to a group
WASHINGTON, Nov.'3 (U.P.).—|of Scout commandos from troop 83 SRE Delbert, O.. WilSurgeon General Thomas Parran of at 8 p. m. Thursday in-the World 97h, Mrvefrier’ Baul Davoren: g S War Memorial. - Claude McLean, Howard Suther-|§: the United States ‘public health The services will be a part of & land, John Smead, Earl Biddinger,| service describes for,a senate educa- special candlelight investiture. serv- Stanley Hague, Frank ¥. Hardy and tion and labor subcommittee today|ice and troop court of honor ar- Bondy 3. Ingram, commander of the role of doctors—both military|ranged by Charles Emmons Jr, en Dost. Sarl badges willl lh; and civilian—in the war: program. leader of the group which meets te iigharl ‘| Witnesses before the subcommit-|every Thursday in St. Paul's Cathe- gl i gon on J ie tee. which is studying manpower|dral under the sponsorship of the Robert, D. Mosier, William Ritchey, resources, have asserted that the Bnyysed Bares post of the Amer- Robert Church and Scouts wn 1th civilian ulation . i : Sa coger je na are inducted Scouts win the coveted rank of} Shnns eh, Babes ute “recklessly” into the armed forces. |major by collecting at least 2150} A musical program Is bein Senate Democratic Whip Lister|pounds of scrap metal for national | arranged by Mrs. Elizabeth og Hill of Alabama has announced that|defense. Troop 83 already has; Cochran, head of the Technical he favors creation of a federallrounded up 135,000 pounds toward |: high school music department. ‘Inagency endowed with pewers to or-|its goal of 150,000. cluded will be violin selections by der unnecessary civilian doctors| The rank of major will be given John Medjeski, accompanied by BA ’ into the army or the navy or to Camillus Bondy, Riley Chilton, Miss Olive Kiler, and accordian W. G. Chandler, member of the |-dislocate” them for work in areas|Charles Cutshall, William Hastings, solos by Leo Joe Robas. A group Advisory Board of Scripps-Howard |i, the continental United States|Samuel Johnson, Donald Justus, of Madrigal Singers from Techfor, than anything that has hap- Newspapers, has accepted an ap- |where there'may be an acute short-|Efthemus Pappas, James Pappas, nical, under the direction of J. Ruspointment by Donald Nelson as |355 of physicians. Leonard Riley, Joseph Saba, Guy sell Paxton, will sing. It includes _ Pened in fhe last two years. chief of the Printing and Publish- Scofield and Eugene Smith. K. Blackburn, Jack A. Chambers Emanating from Germany,| ing Division of the WPB. David Elder and Bennett White Gloria M. Cole, Arthur E. Eberechoed by the Nazi press in Paris
JERLIN. PUSHING VICHY FOR AID
‘Nazis Want French Navy And Colonial Army | On Side of Reich.
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- Significant news-behind-the-news is interpreted in the jonowing askicle by an Pl observer who, until the entrance into the war, was a Ber correspondent for NEA Service.
ro . By JEAN GRAFFIS § Times Special Writer Berlin's synthetic “Allied attack on Dakar” ballyhoo, plus the united nations’ real-for-sure drive in Egypt, must be giving Vichy’s Laval more to worry about, and the average Frenchman more to hope
When nostrils clogup, nosefeelsraw § and sore, membranes swollen— § that’s the time for Mentholatum, § quick! Spread Mentholatum thor- § oughly inside each nostril. oe Instantly it releases safe va id “Mentholations” 2 le he Pi 4 vital actions: 1) They thin out § thick mucus; 2) Soothe irritated § membranes; 3) Help reduce swol- § | len passages; 4) Stimulate nasal § blood supply. Every breath brings §
Bennett White (left) and David Elder . + . o to be inducled as
CHUNGKING, Nov. 3 (U. P.).—|Will be inducted as tenderfoot Scouts NY tenderfoot Scouts. :
CLAIM HONG KONG RAIDED
hardt, Berdyne R. Egli, Sylvia Har-
, and re-echoed by collaborationist - . . ; : f Arthur G . : . ! Radio Tokyo said today that allied under the direction of Arthur x. : ) ~| riamn, Laura Hull, Robert Logan, ic oa Viehy papers, the Dakar = story POS PONE ISSUE planes raided Hong Kong again yes-| Gemmer, troop committeeman. Don- (of the Central Indiana council, will| Robert D. Mosier. Joan Richey, Mary Lou Thurston ish wdcome 1oLi Jamel, means just one thing—that the . terday. ald H. Wilson, chief Scout executive present the rank of Star Scout: to The troop court of honor will be'and Shirley E. Williams. ol
Nazi masters are prepared to call _on Laval and Petain for another big - favor—perhaps the biggest of 1 Us
-.the Nazis would graciously and
| was overlooked, Now that - they
* MANY NEVER
all. Want Navy in Fight . i : If granted, this favor would turn| Printing of a Permanent : No Phone, ; Buy War 31 out to be the nearest thing to all- Co . Bonds : & out military collaboration yet at- Congressional Record Is Mail or : : 5 tained by the Berlin-Vichy com- Delayed by Senator. C.D. D : ik | “and 11: bine. gs. Ms 8 : ! ! | St am ) s : ; rr nie Tosi Orders 3 60 ASHINGTON ST ? esi: age $k uw Cn W. W yT.—FREE PARKING BD wri | Meary of Oregon Yesterday ob- ° ° | IN
generously offer armed assistance to ' the French. Signing and sealing the deal as a Franco-German military alliance would follow. automatically. Further evidence of current Nazi pressure along this line is-the report that industrial units along rail lines between Lyon, Limoges and St. Etienne in Un-occupied France are threatened with German control. This does not mean that German soldiers would come in to pa-
tained unanimous consent to postpone for 30 days the printing of the permanent edition of the Congressional Record until Sen. Prentiss' M. Brown (D. Mich.) can establish the “authenticity” of material inserted by him in the record.
A bitter congressional fight is being waged by the senate farm bloc over an interpretation of the recently passed anti-inflation law put in the record by the Michigan senator, who managed the bill in the
trol such plants. There is a more senate. Farm bloc leaders have - “correct” way than that, as Paris|charged that Brown placed the “il- = ale of Women’ S $4.99 ( HENILLE CRIB SPREADS 3 industrialists learned early in the legitimate” interpretation in the game, aioe Shs a Dass Congressional Record ~~ “surrepti- 42x65 in. children’s crib spreads in col- | wha e azis eman or e tiously.” & . | orful nursery designs. $1.29 and $1.49
power—coal or electricity—is turned off. A French factory owner I met in Berlin in’ 1941 made his apologies to me for collaborating with the ' Germans. : “If 1 don't take their orders,” he said, “I get no coal. Without coal, the plant is idle. When the plant is idle, 350 of my countrymen have no work and cannot eat.”
Enforce New Law
Also backing up Germany's now desperate move for full military | collaboration are new dismissals at Vichy of French army officers. Brigadier General Jacquot and General Bala ‘are reported to have been retired under the law against secret societies, a Vichy announce‘ment is quoted. | Operation of this law is typically Vichy-Berlin. Within a few days after the Germans occupied France, they forced the issuance of anti-Masonic decrees. Before that, almost anyone ‘could be a Mason. The lodges admitted Catholics and Protestants ‘alike and were operated primarily ‘along French nationalistic lines. The decree cost thousands of ‘Frenchmen their jobs. Others lost their lives. But many, particularly those in high posts, were shown leniency. Their Masonic ties were . simply held over them as a threat.
Laval Seeks Control
Jacquot and Bala probably fall into the third class. As long as ‘they played ball with Vichy and Berlin, their membership in the Masons or some other secret group
believe Laval is going too far with the Nazis, they are ousted—on perfectly “legal” grounds. . Ouster of key men by Vichy now is significant because it means Laval’s move toward military commitments with Germany is being resisted not only by the Frenchman in the street, but by higher-ups as well. : Laval’'s efforts to mollify the people’ of France are pitiful. Collaboration under Laval is on the verge of a fearful step.
WORKED FOR $124, ENLISTS, GETS $170
NEW YORK, Nov. 3.—(U. P.).— Mrs. Lawrence Slyman assured solicitous neighbors today that she and her nine children would get by, although her husband has enlisted. As a worker in a war plant, he made $124.80 a month. As a private with 10 dependents, he will make $170 a month—$142 for his family and $28 for himself. Slyman is 31. He and his wife were 16 when they were married.
INITIATION SET Mrs. Hazel Postma, senior regent of the Women of the Moose, announced today the library committee chapter night program will be held at 8 p.m. Thursday in the Moose temple, 135 N. Delaware st. Mrs. Melbourne Davidson will speak and entertainment will be
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McNary Avoids Dispute’
Sen. McNary. in requesting the 30-day stay in printing of the record, told the senate that he was “taking no part” in the cofftroversy between Sen. Brown and the farm bloc, but he felt that the permanent record “should be not: printed” until Senator Brown has been given an, oppertunity to establish the authenticity of his interpretation of the bill. - Under Sen. Brown's explanation of the anti-inflation act, the office of price administration is permitted to include soil conservation and other benefit payments to farmers in figuring ceiling prices on agricultural commodities. This permits lower ceilings than otherwise would be possible. . Farm state senators have asserted that such a view of the act dces not represent the intent of congress and that inclusion of benefit payments results in “sub-parity, unfair, and . illegitimate” maximums being established on many farm products.
WLB PANEL BALKS AT STRIKE PENALTY
Times Special WASHINGTON, Nov. 3.—War la-| bor board officials today confirmed reports that two members of a three-man panel had voted against a proposal to require dollar-a-day penalties for war production workers who engage in strikes not authorized by their union leaders. The proposal was made by the Jones & Laughlin' Steel Corp. of Pittsburgh. It has official status before the board because it was a part of a reply to the board’s recent request that the company show cause why its labor contract with the United Steelworkers of America (C.1.0.) should not be made to include the same benefits won by the union from several U. S. Steel subsidiaries and other steel companies. The majority and minority reports probably will be made public in a few days. Because of wide interest in the proposal, the board is thought likely to order a public hearing on the question.
BIND PRINCIPAL; FIRE SCHOOL HOUSE
NIAGARA FALLS, N. Y,, Nov. 3 (U. P.).—Milton Gurbitz, 22-year-old German-Jewish principal of suburban Sankorn school, was rescued from his blazing schoolhouse last night after two men had gagged him, bound him helplessly to a chair, and set fire to the building. State police immediately spread a dragnet for the perpetrators accused by Burbitz, who was reported badly burned in the fire which destroyed the schoolhouse. Gurbitz was rescued by nearby Lewiston firemen responding to the fire alarm.
LADY BOUNTIFUL ON WAY TO NEW YORK
VICHY, Nov. 3 (U. P.).—Mrs. Laura Corrigan, Cleveland philanthropist who disposed of her jewels and furs to aid wounded - French soldiers and interned Americans in German concentration camps, -today was en route to Lisbon, London and New York. Mrs. Corrigan, widow of a steel king, has been the outstanding
ckache | «yr a4y Bountiful” of the war. She
sent monthly food packages to all American men and women interned
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Special Dollar Day
2 FOR
Rayon crepes, alpacas, wools, corduroys, etc. Styles for most all occasions in black and a big assortment of colors. to 52 in the lot.
EACH $3.98
*
Sizes 12 Small,
mas.
Star Store, Second Floor
Special Dollar Day
265
Well made full cut correctly styled robes in assorted designs and patterns. blue, white, aqua and berry. medium and large sizes. Buy now for Christ-
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BIG ROOMY E-Z-DO
CLOSETS
Dubl-Size 1 00 *
60x22x20-inch, double door closets that hold up to 20 garments. Theyre dust and moth resistant, just like an extra closet. 25¢ extra charge if delivered within the city. (Limit one to a customer.)
$1.29 STOVE RUGS $700 | *
$700
Full-Fashioned
Star Store, Street Floor Pin Dot.
RUFFLE CURTAINS
Pair
A special Dollar Day offering of these better quality pin dot cotton marquisette curtains. 40 inches wide, 2L5 yards long. 4 inch ruffle and tie backs. Cream color.
Star Store, Basement
8 to 20.
RY
5% WOOL
SHEER RAYON
) HOSE
Seconds of 88¢c and $1 Qualities -
Sheer chiffon weight high twist rayon hose that will give long satisfactory service. Popular fall and winter colors in sizes 8%: to 10%z. The toes are reinforced with cotton.
Boys' MACKINAW and . ~~ FINGERTIP
COATS $500
All wool mackinaws, assorted colors, belted models, sizes 10 to 14. Reversible finger tip coats of fine corduroy or corded wool mixed material. Sizes
Star Store, , Street Floor
Women’s
SHOES ¥ LL
$2.98 and $3.98 Values
One special lot of women’s kid, suede and patent shoes. Pumps, ties and oxfords, black or brown. Cuban or high heels. Sizes up to 9 but not every style in all sizes.
Star Store, Street Floor
VE BLANKETS
$199
Pair
Men’s Winter UNION SUITS
$1.00 Values
Values v.ovvevrennencsinnsness..aCh
9 —SIRLS’ SHIRT BLOUSES -
Tailored broadcloth blouses in white and plain colors, sizes 8 to 16.
9— WOMEN’S OUTING GOWNS
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| 9—B0Y¢ POLO SHIRTS for . .
9—PRS. 89¢c BARELEG HOSE
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—WONEN'S UNION SUITS
Warm winter union suits, white ribbed fleeced, broken sizes 36-12-48 and 50 only ......ceiiiinnnn ..
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4-108 30.IN. Rayon LININGS
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7 YDS. (9c OUTING FLANNEL
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Men's SHIRTS or SHORTS for
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Men’s coat sweaters in brown and Oxford grey. Sizes 36 to 42. Boys’ sweaters in fancy combination patterns. Button and zipper style. Sizes 4 to 14.
Fine jersey cloth polo shirts im neat. stripés. Wine, blue and brown. Long sleeves. Sizes 4 to 12. :
in occupied France. : ? = 4 J b
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