Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 15 February 1943 — Page 7
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| MADRID, Feb, 15 ©. B)— dame Poucheaux hds descended ' Tor er from heér {iy réfreshment * pif atop he Eiffel Tower whéré for | cable 42 years shé was part of the current of joy and serrow flowing about . Paris’ best-loved landmark ané wheére she met most of the famous Le s:ecple of the world. Madame trod wearily down the ywer’s thousand stairs for the last Aime Saturday, réporfs from France
| 2 8did, and bade good-bye to. the Parisian spirés which she |
«= forest of knew so well and of which hef own |thé
© was the
highest. : - Now 80, Madame Pouchésux is weary dnd wishes to retire to thé ~ dountry cottage which she has pur: | ehased with her not incorsidérable savings, the messages said. * Madame Pouche#uz is a charaete? that belongs to the world. Sooner or later, everyome of any ihtér-
fiditonal consequétice visited the
Fiffel Tower and had a drink af fhadame’s bar. * 8he saw love affairs bloom under the spell of the tower's wind-swept pillars anid saw other pérsons, love: sek, hiifl themselves to death in
the streets below. Madame could |
feécount a gory eyewitness history of suicides from bankrupt indusfrialists to ladies of the evening. ~ Among the other sights she saw
® _%as the attempt of a daring aviator
top | itl Tower|
y|
to. fly béneath the arch formed the tower's immense ton legs. The ying of his Jlane struck & wire : he erased to ‘& fiery oe an
Two other | SHnits stand unforgettable in madame’s memory, she told travelers. The first was in 1014 when from her lofty vantage peint she heard the te of German guns and
where thé Gérinane were stopped. The seeond was in 1040 when thé enémiy Yéturded. This time he ‘kept on coming and Geran soldiers even swarmed fo miadame’s bar for & drink.
MOSCOW ‘DOUBTFUL’ OF TIMOSHENKG VISIT
MOSCOW, Feb. 15 (U. P.).—Soviet - sources today deseribed as “doubtful” 4 report published in
moshiénks, four Russian generals and an admiral Have left for en ington to corfér with President Roosevelt afid Mrs. Chiang Kai Shek. The report, Which appeared ii a Stockholm dispatch to the London ‘Sunday Dispateh, said that the soviet party was traveling fo the United States via the Middle East,
| Dakar and Bragil. -
London tat Marshal Semyon Ti-|
Only for Men on. the Fighting Fronts,
—Capt. Edward V. Rickenbacker,
(who was rescueds from the south saw the fighting at the Marne, |
Pacifio, i§ opposed to overtime pay for thé 48-hour week during the “Everybody should be ready to work 48 hours a week for the high | thourly* wages they get: mow==if for
‘Ino othér reason than to save their
own skins,” he said yesterday iin afi interview prior to a national broadcast to high school pupils and educators at Independence hall. “In times ike this,” he said, “I ‘do riot approve of overtime pay except for the men ini the foxholes, the swamps, the deserts—those making the supreme sacrifice.” The veteran flier said, however, that he was opposed to limiting salaries to $25,000 a year, “because to limit salary you limit incentive, whieh is one of the great American cornerstones, -Anybody is entitled
to work and be paid for it.” °
"OVERTIME PAY) oc
[Favors Extra Compensation
PHILADELPHIA, Feb, 15 (U. B).}
nies or war stamps. Nemth, Kansas City, Mo., visiting here, sent him a Valentine yesterday. It was a war stamp book with a “goed start” init. ~~’ "The “new weapon” is deseribed - as. an = experimental . medicine made of yellow bone marrow which was injected into young Laswell’s muscles for the first time Saturday. ' STORE THIEF CHOQOSY ELIZABETH, N. P.).—=Mrs. Louise - Bre reportéd today that the thief who broke into} her shoe store apparently didn’t like her shoes. He took $10 and a number of Ho. 17 ration stamps, with which he can buy shoes somewhere else.
TOBACCO DEALERS
MUST FILE REPORTS
- LAFAYETTE, Ind., Feb. 15.~Bur“Sor tobacco dealers and manufac~4urers in Indiana are required to
tribution administration, agrieuli ture department, Washington, EB. O aiPollock said today. : ¢.» Mr. Pollock, regional FDA admin. Listrator, said order No. 4.1 direéts =the allocation of the 1942 burley crop on the basis of the 1939, 1940 sand 1941 acquisitions. In thé first report called for under this order,
«dealers and manufacturers listéd!|:
g their acquisitions from crops 6f thé
«three base years. This reporé was| =
due June 18.
5] 3 HAZARDS THAT LIFE ERs OVERCOMES
The Hazard of Living Too Long— Outliving your income age earnings.
The Hazard of g Too Soon— .Before accumulat én estate for
your family. es
AL oF 5 Nig apis nN w
The Hazard of insurance plans ‘t you need fo save. Jourre re going and when you'll get
“our Jepresentatives are trained A t6 sérve you ty 2 gonseientious ma Phone MA-9488, or TA-1 Rr INDIANAPOLIS LIFE INSURANCE €O. Over $127,000,000 in force EDWARD B. RA President A. LEROY PORTTEUS, Viee-Pres,
’ “You | CAN PREVENT TE 2. 1ee and Snow from 3 | Driveways and Sidewalks y slick. slippery, and dangerous!
APPLY Columbia Caloium ‘Chloride § _ It Melts Snow and Ice! A For 564 %
Call
fi
FURNACES—STOKERS GAS BURNERS — OIL BURNERS
You will like our cleaning and rex pairing service. Phone for free in-
spection. 4 11-4576
HALL-NEAL
FURNACE CO. © 1322-32 N. CAPITOL AVE.
A- nr SR
| IF A THOROUGH EXAMINATION |
Store Hours: Tuesday Through Saturday 9:45 to 5:45
im
Established 29 Years
DR. R. J.
In Charge
Use Your Charge Aecount— or Qur Payment Plan
} trade” in repairing all kinds of
Walter Norwalt . . . learns why it doesn't tick.
Walter Norwalt is following the “father and son” tradition at the Indianapolis jewelry firm of Gray, Gribben & Gray. . For 23 years the late Fred c.
Norwalt was in charge of the watch and clock repair depart-. ment: at the store. His son, Walter, was his apprentice at home for seven years during that time, learning the “tricks of the
clocks and watches. In May last year Walter Norwalt followed in his father steps and became the chief watchmaker at Gray, Gribben & Gray, just as Paul Gray is following the “father and son” tradition. « Since taking over the department, Mr. Norwalt has found plenty of work to keep himself and two assistants busy. One of the chief reasons is, of course, the order of the war production board ‘halting the manufacture of alarm clocks. That order has been rescinded in part and some clock
'g OPTICAL DEPARTMENT
WELDON
x 2
Nn Transits vehicles are crowded. Give yourself plenty of time to reach you Sitti !
HoME
LEAVE
manufacturers are now preparing to turn out a “victory model” alarm clock. There are still supplies of repair parts, Mr. Norwalt said, and he and his two assistants have been able to give fast service on repairs. Many alarm clocks do not need. much repairing, he stated, but only a good cleaning and oiling and adjusting by an expert to make them run properly again. ‘James C. Gribben said the store’s situation in obtaining new watches is helped by the fact that manufacturers allot watches to retail stores on the basis of sales in former years. Because Gray, Gribben & Gray has always had a large sale of watches, the present allotments to the store are correspondingly generous. The supply of diamonds, Mr. Gribben pointed out, is very good. Prices have not advanced much, he stated. The diamond engagement and wedding ring combination is becoming increasingly popular as are diamond rings for men, he noted. Also becoming more popular are gifts for men in service, rings and pins which are designed with the insignia of the various branches of the army, navy and marines,
POULTRY GRADERS ATTENDING SCHOOL
A school of instruction for poultry graders is being held at the Wadley Co. here today and tomorrow fo provide intensive training and practice
in grading Poulisy accordirig to the revised TU. S. official standards of
B. W. Kempers, regional supervisor of the poultry and dairy branch of the food distribution administration, and E. R. Menefee of Purdue university are in charge of the school. All new price ceilings to be established will be based on these revised grades,
{quality..
TER
VIII
” HU-4252 TERMITE CONTROL 60.
NEW EGG DRYING: PLANTS SOUGHT
Government Officials Meet Here With Prospective
Builders.
Prospective egg driers in Indiana today met with representatives of the food distribution administration at Hotel Severin to discuss possible expansion of the industry in this state. There are now four Indiana egg drying plants, with an annual capacity of 16 million pounds, located at Centerville, Indianapolis, Terre Haute and Union City. The meets ing here is to obtain additional capacity in areas where egg production is large, in order to supply growing military, allied and domestic néeds for this wartime product. Dried egg requirements for 1943 are set at 480 million pounds, “Egg drying,” said E. O. Pollock,
| FDA regional director, ‘is big business. A plant of modest capacity mond of Indianapolis and Hugh G.
requires working capital sufficient to meet its overhead and to supply
thousand cases a day for daily operation, not to mention the accumulation, during the flush production season, of shell eggs for future drying. The industry is making and dealing in a dollar-a-pound product, of which the average plant produces roughly 10,000 pounds a day for about 300 days a year.” i : Supply Is Good ; Pollock explained that ansion in the industry is being sought in areas of the midwest where supplies of eggs are locally available in sufficient quantities to assure full-time operation of existing plants which may be constructed or developed. Approval -of new plant construction or development|® of existing facilities, he said, would be provided by the FDA only in those localities where shell eggs are abundant. It has been unnecessary for the government to finance the expansion that has staken place thus far in the industry, and government financing of the new plants required is not contemplated. Because of the critical nature of most of the material needed in constructing egg drying plants, Pollock advised that applicants who expect to obtain approval of plants,
|should own or have access to the
following: (1) desirable building, including refrigeration facilities and boiler capacity on the premises— space for candling and breaking, and short hold storage for shell and frozen eggs and egg powder; (2) enough cold storage near by to hold raw eggs for a back-log, in order to assure year round operations; (3) adequate transportation: (4) suficient personnel to operate: (5) adequate capital to finance plant and back-log of shell ‘eggs. The meeting was arranged with the ' co-operation of the Purdue agricultural extension service. Robist of the FDA dairy and petlat: branch, Washington, D. is in charge of the meeting.
INSURANCE GAIN NOTED BY PERRY
Bertrand J. Perry, president of Massachusetts Mutual Life 1o- (pay polar has stops us ore thas date ed were made last year. Total assets of $810,336717 were up $44,379,888. The increase in assets is represented chiefly by holdings in U. S. government
earnings of $15,759,213 showed a gain of $2,183,942, 4! There was an increase of 5269 life -|insurance policies for $29,701,327. Ths total amount of life insurance
under 532,915 policies. In over 40,000 annuity contracts are in
“Feb, 15 (uv, |Tugwelisn era,”
shell eggs at the rate of nearly a|{Lunte; a sister, Mrs. Anna Camp-| | bell of Auburn, Cal, and three .
facilities in accordance with the
which now &xceed $05 00 aa R
in force at Dec. 33 was $2065. 144.87 0th &
force with the company. The net| rate of interest earned by the com-| F}
OPA Diractives Perform! One em of Motul in Early
oe New Deal Days. ny DA mamNEY
Charles A. Halleck ®. Ind) charged today. Mr. Halleck sald he § the house to act this week oh His résolution for an investigation of the
interstate ana foreign
committee and also of the powertul house rules committee. “Our committee went into grade labeling, now ordered by OPA, dnd turned it down away back in the Mr. Halleck said. ‘Terms Labeliig Needed
OPA officials maintain that grade labeling is necessary to méke sénse out of thé price stiucture and énable buyers to be sure of obtaining grades A, B, ©, etc, af the prices at which they actually were frozen. It applies particularly to canned goods, they point out. One of the business worries, res garding grade labeling is that wells advertised brand names might dis-
tions of the standards division of OPA, and Dickson Reéck, senior technical associate, who are in direct charge of the program, cite Canadian . experiénce to support heir point. Mr. Halleck sald he is determined to explore the subject thoroughly thirough the subcommittee, as soon] as possible. “Brands have a publie value,” he asserted. “Standards misused can destroy quality, create mediocrity, stifle competition, slow up progress, destroy initiative, help the shyster, eliminate brands as consumer guides and regiment production.”
ELEANOR DRUMMOND DIES AT HOME HERE
Mrs. Eleanor Jameson Drummond, wife of James G. Drummond, died this morning at hér home, 80 Ww. 46th st, She was born in East St. Louis. She was at member of the Cenfral Christian church and the Queen Esther chapter, O. E. S., here. ghe and Mr. Dr cele brated their 50th wedding anniversary Nov. 25, 1941, The survivors, besides the husband, are two sons, Henry J. Dfum-
Drummond, stationed at Ft. Bayard, N. Mex.; a a daughter, Mrs. Helen
grandchildren. Funeral arrangements have not been completed. The service will be at Flanner & Buchanan mortuary. Burial will be in Crown Hill
FINNS RENAME RYTI OVER MANNERHEIM
‘STOCKHOLM, Feb. 15 (U. P).— Risto Ryti was re-elected today to his second term as president of wartorn Finland. He defeated Field Marshal Karl Gustav Mannerheim, a national military hero. Ryti was kept in office for another two-year term beginning March 1 by ad overwhelming vote of the 300 electors gathered at Helsinki, the capital. He was chosen on the first ballot. It was the first time anyone had been elected to a second term in Finland.
POPE TQ RECEIVE - SOVIET MISSION
By PAUL GHALI
ht, 1943, by The Indianapolis Times Coprria) The Chicago Daily News, In
‘GENEVA, Feb. 15.—~The pope has consented to the sending of a special Soviet diplomatic mission to the Vatican, according to’ the most reliable sources here in close contact with papal circles. The mission, which is described as of an “informative character,” will only pay a temporary visit to Vatican City. Its arrival there is expected in the very near future, the Fascist government having already granted the necessary transit
Lateran .treaty.
BOARD APPROVES TUXEDO ST. PAVING
The works board today approved a petition for paving one block on Tuxedo st. from North st. to St. Clair st. The petition, signed by Tuxedo
Manufacturing Co. had agreed to pay expenses of the improvements.
DISTRICT 47 LISTS
‘mattér by a subcommittee from the commerce committée. He is ‘a member of the|
appear from the market. Willis) J Msaecleon, chief of technical opera-
st. property owners, said the RCA|
~NEW 1ST AID GLASS |
Cadet McCollough Cadet Fogg Two aviation edasts from Here ‘have graduated from army primary flight trathing at. Thunders bird’ field, Glendale, Ariz. They are J E. MéColiough, 25, the son 6f Mr. ahd Mrs. Clars ence Bordenkecher, 2814 E. MichiRichard
gan st. BE Fogg, a sradusie ¢ of Technical high school
Cadet MeCollough was gradu ated from Technical high school in 1936 and worked at L. S. Ayres before joining the air corps. Cadet Fogg’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Fogg, now reside in
Odk Park, Ill. Before enlisting, |
he worked for the Cherry Bur‘rell corp. of Chisago. o #8 Chiitles T Apple, 19-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. Paul Apple of Arcadia, Ind., has reported for training at the naval station at Great Lakes, 111 ® 8 Three men from selective service board 13 have been accepted for service. They are Lester Lucas, 1632 8. East, army; Samuel Phillips, 5350 Madison, marines, and Jimmie Skillern, 1652 Spann, army.
Today’s Doughboys ...
When Joneses and Smiths turn up in pairs, it isn’t news. But down in the 83d artillery the other day, a soldier's call on the range brought two. men running to answer to the name of Hajdu. It developed that they were both Steve Hajdu—Pvts. Steve Hajdu
| of the same unit in the same divi-
sion at the same camp, But they were no relation, had never seen each other before. : ‘They soon discovered they had other things in common besides an unusual name and have since become fast friends. ; 2 8 = Pfc. Paul W. Gardner, 2006 N Emerson ave., has been promoted to corporal at Stout field, where he is in charge of all new electrical work. He is assigned to the air base squadron. He is a member of Pentalpha lodge 564, I. O. O. F.
Now in rsi2ing 16 be poy o-
|cérs are 16 men from Indianapélis
who have arrived at the naval Sta tion at Great Lakes, Ill. Jémés L. Weaver, 1781 Maisa i dvé.; Paul P. Wyard, 3030 BE. New York st. Maurice O. Joriés; Noble L. Robling; 365 8. Arlington ave; Lorin MeAfee, 350 Millrdce ave.; Charles #. Hearin, 665 B. 95th st; Virlin ¥. Caldwell, 840 5. Beile‘view pl; Otis W. Pickett, 1445 Hiatt st; Douglas Grant, 808 N. Delaware &t.; Arthur T. Florey, 1300 N. Pennsylvania st: Walter A. Wood, R. R. 1; Joha PF. Béckerich; 5032 Collége dve.; William R.
; Central vé.: Jon 4 A. Fil Fa nels
# Two men tom , aarapelis former eorpordls in the army, have been commissioned second lieuténants following graduation from the officer candiflate school at Camp Barkeley, Tex. The men, now officers in the meéd-
C. Haris, 29, the son of Mr. and
ical administrative corps, are Harty! the
Radio Operator
Corp. Albert F. Glatér; so of Homer E. Slater, uN Wallace st. now holds a diploma as 4 qualified radio operator in thé armored force. He was graduated from a radio school at Pt: Knox; Ky: 2 & 8 : : Staff Bergh. Haiold R. Deringer, 86h 6 Mr. aid Mrs. Harold F. Daringer, 276 S. Sheéifian @r., has returned to the army after a 103day furlough here with his parents. Hc
headquarters’ éompany of the army ground forces. / # 0» 8 ; Bit. Edward J. Barrett, sen of Mis, Ana E. Barféth of 4268 061lege ave., has reported for duty a: army flying base Base at oaTisbag,
N. M.
this conveniently’ located
Convensently reached by
EAST MICHIGAN CAR LINE
_ Phone us day or night for instructions on reaching
TARRY n00RE
PEACE CHAPEL 2050 E. MICHIGAN ST. = CHERRY 5020
Co-operation Between Party-Line Users is Particularly Important Right Now
42 Because copper and other waterials required for building additional telephone lines are more urgently needed for weapons of war, we are unable to expand our facilities at this time.
‘600D TELEPHONE
ARE. CONSIDERATE
: % They keep their conver | sations as brief as.possible. 5 i %* They avoid making seve eral calls in succession. i
This means that we must make the most of
what we have, so it becomes necessary for an
i * They do. not interrupt i Other calls on the line:
increasing number of telephone lines to serve two or more families instead of only one family: When you share a party line you make it poss. sible for others to have: service, :
a Naturally because of this wactime simation Hie da i ore err lg i
is stationed in Washington with the
