Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 9 February 1943 — Page 7

7

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a e inducted at a tribal ceremony of a group of Indians ‘from the old town reservation

| he Sservation

foot Pine Tree, largest wooden vessel to be sent down an Ameriarn 2 launching, th e e first lady was presented with a miniature of the vessel and a. bouquet of flowers. Then the tribe held its ceremony and pre- + sented her with a tribal head-

'LINDBERGH CALLS ON SENATOR WHEELER

- Times Special WASHINGTON, Feb. 9.—Charles

A. Lindbergh and Senator Wheeler

(D. Mont.) spent three hours in the senator's office yesterday. ‘Senator Reynolds (D. N. C.), military affairs committee chairman, sat in for part of the time at Mr, Wheeler’s invitation. Lindbergh declined to discuss the subject of the conference. ‘So did the senators, All three were prom- ‘ {nent in the pre-Pearl Harbor campaign against U, S. involvément in the war. Senator Wheeler said that Lindbergh, who is now engaged as an aviation expert in the Ford and -other airplane fattories, had asked for the conference. “Nothing important was disgussed,” Mr. Wheeler said. : “We just talked about this and that,” said Mr. Reynolds,

IT

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CONCERT OF ORCHESTRA

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PLAN CHECK 0

Distributors’ Payments To Farmers.

he OPA today announced & nationwide emergency ceiling soon will be

distributors may pay to fhrmers. The action will be taken, OPA said, in an effort to prevent further rises in the cost of milk to the public. The regulation will stipulate that

nounced effective date of the order until April 9, no fluid milk distributor may pay more to producers for his supplies than the highest prices he paid for milk delivered in January, 1943.

Permanent Policy Due

The regulation will be replaced by one reflecting a permanent milk

It will not apply to producer prices

for milk of 4 per cent butter fat

content for fluid use which are below $2.75 per hundredweight. Economic * Stabilization Director James F. Byrnes ordered the 60-day period devoted to a careful study of measures for nfaintenance’ of dairy production: at present high

{levels without further increases in

producer prices.

)

Son Administers Rites to Father

PROVIDENCE, R. 1, Feb, 9 (U. P.).—When Domenico Cardi, 63, was buried beneath 40 feet of sand yesterday after a landslide, neighbors called a Catholic priest . to administer the last rites of the church. The priest, who performed the duties of his office without knowing the identity of the victim, was the Rev. Roland Cardi, the dead. man’s son.

DRAFT FRENCH FOR LABOR

BERLIN, Feb, 9 (Broadcast Recorded in New York).—The Berlin radio broadcast a Vichy dispatch quoting a decree in .the official Ga~ zette that Frenchmen of the 1922 class weré being drafted for eight months of labor service.

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ment Circle, Room 201, until 5 “ M. at Theater 7 P. M. Prices; $2.20, 81 65, oR a i

COLISEUM

MILK PRICE NSE

2 |0PA Will Place Ceiling on|

WASHINGTON, Feb. 9 (U. P)—

placed on the prices that fluid milk

in general from the as yet unan-|

price policy within the next 60 days. |

- Journalism students of Indiana university investigate the new Lincoln room in the library which will be dedicated Saturday. Left to right are Donna Jean Carpenter, Tauton, Mass.; Suzanne Weaver, Noblesville; Gene L. Meihsner, Indianapolis; Prof. J. Wymond French, of the journalism staff; Eugene Jepson

Cadou Jr. and Marilyn Velma Vice, both of Indianap olis.

Experience Gives Flying Yanks Edge Over Once-Feared Japs

By HAROLD GUARD . United Press Staff: Correspondent

WITH THE ALLIED FORCES SOMEWHERE" IN NEW GUINEA, Feb. 7 (U. P.)— (Delayed. —Experience has given something new to American pilots fighting the Japanese in New Guinea skies—they know they're Superior to the enemy now. = ; The same type crews fly the same type bombers, while fighter planes harry the same old targets, but there's fresh confidence behind every man’s aim. Pilots, who six months ago believed Japanese zeros were better than American planes, now know

‘they're not.

° Blast the Zeros

American fighter craft, which once fell easy preyl to agile zeros, today are flying rings around enemy planes and blasting them from the skies. Every bomber and fighter squaddron keeps tally of enemy aircraft destroyed and the once-vaunted zeros are now laughed at by youthful veterans, who have learned their job the hard way.

A new spirit has been born among

these’ young men, who in less than a year have grown from boys into

| fighters::with a single ,purpose—to

destroy. the enemy.

Bach, : unit proudly fisplays the

Quitting Time! | Get Together _ with Enj oy ment |

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AFTER PUNCHING THE

! ER the way home and for a friendly get-together. plan, drink Falls City— t's 100% STRAIGHT-AGED.

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names of its comrades killed in combat, and Maj. Robert MecCutcheon of Bishop, Va. said: “They'd all be proud to see what we are doing nowadays. We're doing it for them.” At the end of one of the honor rolls is a poem written by Lieut. Robert Renneissen of Jasper, Ind. The last stanza reads: “Don’t count us lost, for we're not dead. : Right now, we're scouting on ahead. The future holds so much in store, With liberty forevermore.”

TILSON TO ADDRESS WARREN G. 0. F. UNIT

“Operation of the Marion County Clerk’s Office” will be the subject of Jack Tilson at the monthly meeting of the Warren Tow ip Republican club at 8 p. m. tomorrow in the honie of Mr. and Mrs. Fred Wiese, Cumberland. ‘Bernard. L. Curry is program chairman and Mrs. Robert Hamilton is in charge of the music. Miss Ruby Lohman, hostess chairman, will be assisted by Mesdames B. L. Curry, Samuel Montgomery, William L. Hurt, Ray Strong, Forrest - L. ‘Hackley, #. N.:. Nicholes, Nora Calvin and Florine Beckman. William Fear, club. President, will preside.

DISCOVER YOUR HOME — ss the .

er with your friends enjoy

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new place with your friends—turn on the radio~

to have fun. Get together

t discussions and Falls ~always a welcome guest!

{End of Rationing Control

| today,

{ber used in a retread.

Expected to Conserve ~~ Reclaimed Rubber.

WASHINGTON, Feb. 9 (U. P.)— Tire recaps for passenger cars soon will be removed from rationing contrpls by the OPA in a move to e stocks of reclaimed rubber, informed quarters revealed

They said the was recom mended by Rubber Director Jeffers, who has assured OPA that sufficient supplies of reclaimed rubber can be made available. _ Elimination of ration controls, it was said, is designed to save tire

stockpile—by retreading before they are worn beyond repair,

can only be replaced by “war models,” which require more than twice the amount of reclaimed rub-

1S ASKS DRAFT BOARDS

carcasses on the 27,000,000 passenger | cars—the nation’s biggest rubbery:

Officials said tires now in service |

TO FURNISH JOBS||

. WASHINGTON, Feb. 9 (U. P| Senator James J. Davis (R, Pa) has|| introduced an amendment. to the, selective service act to require that|

local draft boards find jobs for| He:

members of the armed forces upon’ termihation of their active service. The amendment would require that any individual who entered active service after May 1, 1940, could not be mustered out, without

his own consent, unless such guar- | twen

“This move,” one official said,

| THE BEST VALUE

LIBRARY SCENE

leaf Collection in New Wing on Saturday.

Times Special BLOOMINGTON, Ind., Feb. 9.— Midwest students and scholars of Lincolnmiana will gather at Indiana university Saturday evening for the formal opening of the Indiana-Ogk-leaf Lincoln'collection. Paul M. Angle, librarian of the Illinois State Historical library in Springfield, will deliver the principal address at the dedication of the new Lincoin room in the university library. He will discuss “Adventures of a Lincoln Scholar,” J. L. Oakleaf, attorney of Moline, IL, will review “The History of the Oakleaf Collection.”

Get Oakleaf Bust

It was from the heirs of the late Judge Joseph B. Oakleaf that the uhiversity purchased the collection last year. Judge Oakleaf had amassed some 8000 books, pamphlets

OF CEREMONIES

| Students to See Judge Oak-

30

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and manuscripts pertaining to Lincoln, or? \ Attorney Oakleaf will present the

IMATE’S TRIAL IS SET|

university with a bronze bust of his father, Judge Oakleaf.

Dinner at 6:30

clude a dinner at 6:30 p. m. in the Union building with President Herman B Wells presiding. Dr. A. L. Kohlmejer, head of the university history department, also will spéak. Governor Schricker will receive the Oakleaf collection for the state.

Special guests at thé dedicatory

ldinner will include Frank and

George A. Ball, representing the Ball Foundation, Muncie; William G. Irwin, Columbus, and Frank L. Jones, New York. It was their gifts of funds to the university that made possible the acquisition of the Oakleaf collection. Among the Hoosier students of Lincolniana who will come té the campus for the opening are Harold F. Brigham, state librarian; Christopher B, Coleman, secretary of the Indiana Historical society; L. L. Dickerson, Indianapolis city librarian, and Lewis A. Warren, Lincoln author and editor of Lincoln Lore.

CHURCHILL PLANS WAR REPORT SOON

LONDON, Feb. 9 (U. P.).—Prime Minister Winston Churchill, back in the house of commons for the first time since ‘he conferred with| President Roosevelt at Casablanca,

told members today that he hoped to make a statement shortly on the war situation, Political quarters said. that the speech had been delayed by a series | of important naval, military, aviation and combined operations (com-| mando) conferences now under way to effectuate the gp at Casablanca.

IN WIFE’S SLAYING:

FRANKLIN, Ind. Feb. 9 (U. P). —William B.. Dickinson, 43, will go on trial for the first-degree murder of his estranged wife, Dorothy, 25, on April 5, Judge Grant Rogers of

_{ Johnson circuit court said today.

. The trial date was set after a conference with Prosecutor Richard]

"MORE PEP? Is Your Hor Inagtfs ;.

' The dedicatory program will in- |

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