Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 1 March 1943 — Page 5
Tunisia. By DAVID DIETZ
the fuel crisis on the east coast of
Il, the United States. It all depends Ry upon how rapidly the North Afri-
eastern end of the M
A
campaign proceeds. point is that the oil of Iran | Iraq can now be gotten as far Haifa, Palestine. If the allies ; sufficiently strong in the
they will then be able to move the
~ oll by tanker from Haifa to Algiers.
The present oil crisis on our east-
em seaboard was precipitated by
the necessity of sending American oll to North Africa. The crisis would ‘relieved if the North African could be supplied with oil
: from Iran and Iraq.
i
| | ment of oil.
{ d
© (U. P).—A section of the Medary-
~ Ofl From Iran and Iraq
Thus, it is explained, North Afri€8, which precipitated the present situation in the Fast, may also be the means of curing it. “If the British, American and French forces succeed in dislodging the Nazis from North Africa, they will have control of the southern fe coast from Spanish Morocco to Turkey. , ‘This in turn wil give them sufficient control of the Mediterranean to reopen the sea lane which in «the past was the second most important in the world for the ship-
. GARMENT PLANT BURNED ~ MEDARYVILLE, Ind, March 1
ville garment firtory was destroyed by fire last night and officials of the firm said that loss of a large stock of garments prepared for shipment would cause the loss to exceed
(What A Cough!
i]
And how it hurts, and nags And disturbs your sleep.
Chronic bronchitis may develop if cough, chest cold, or acute bronrd pop iacated and You cannot a8 ce - less potent than on B0UDIO to BE eon rio goak of the and expe laden and aid nature to stots End heal raw, tender inflamed 5 Rolo aS. 00d erec te by special process with other tested medicines for coughs.
contains no narcotics,
No matter how many fedicines lou have tried, tell your druggist to on bottle of SEER kL with
e
Her Children's
Adjustment
To Holland Worries Juliana
OTTAWA, Ont, March 1.—Princess Juliana of the Netherlands feels she will encounter a “very difficult problem” when her three small daughters, living happily in Canada, return to their homeland and encounter Dutch youngsters who have been subjected to hunger and the oppression of the Nazis. The princess is acutely conscious of her double responsibility as the mother of three children and heir to the Netherlands throne. One of
her primary responsibilities, said yesterday, is how her children will be able to adjust themselves to their own duties upon their return to Holland after the war. “Holland will have ckanged so much when we go back,” she said. “We don’t spoil the children. But of course they have everything they want. “It is hard to say how they will adjust themselves. It will be a very difficult problem when they meet children who have not had
TANK DESTROYER IN MASS PRODUCTION
DETROIT, March 1 (U. P.).—
General Motors Corp. has revealed that one of the army's newest weapons—the M-10, a powerful tank destroyer—is in volume production at the Fisher body tank arsenal. : The M-10, one of three newly designed models, is armed with a high-velocity gun which army officials said “could trade blows on an even basis” with 88-mm. weapons found on the heaviest German Mark VI tanks in Africa. The new tank destroyer is mounted on an M-4 tank chasis, but is faster and has greater maneuverability than a tank. It is of welded construction, with an open turret.
HOOSIER MERCHANT DEAD
FT. WAYNE, Ind, March 1 (U. P.) —Funeral services will be held Wednesday for Theodore Frank, 79, president of the Frank Dry Goods Co. of Ft. Wayne, who died at his home yesterday of a cerebral hemorrhage.
38
ALL DO OUR BIT—WITH FUNDS or GUNS
un i it {HH
PRIVATE PARKING FACILITIES
Reich Absentees Sent to Prison
By UNITED PRESS Absentees in German war plants are being sent to prison, OWI ‘said today. ; Quoting a dispatch in a German newspaper, the OWI said a 19-year-old girl worker was sent to prison for 10 weeks, a 22-year-old woman for three months and a 19-year-old youtky for six months, The defendants were charged with ‘inexcusable absence” from work. The dispatch complained that there still were too many “undoubtiful people” who failed to understand that loafing would not be tolerated.
GAA WOULD. SPEND $230,000 AT. FIELD
About $230,000 in additional government improvements at Municipal airport today awaited action by the city council. A resolution, approved by the works board today, would legalize a new lease agreement between the city and the civil aeronautics authority and would give the government authority to proceed with the modernization begun in 1941. The resolution was submitted to the city council. Glenn Funk, assistant city atforney, said the new lease was drawn up after the CAA department supervising improvements at the airport under the old agreement, had expended all available funds. Immediate work to be completed upon adoption of the resolution will be construction of a new 5100-foot runway and extension of two others.
SEEK PAY BOOSTS FOR GITY WORKERS
Approximately 100 maintenance men and operators at the city garbage reduction and sewage disposal
pay increases under an ordinance to be introduced tonight in city council, | The measure provides for appropriation of the salary boost from the 1943 general sanitation fund. Donald Bloodgood, manager of the sanitation and reduction plants, said the raises were necessitated by the general rise in living costs. Upon passage of the ordinance, workers in the city sanitation system who are paid semi-monthly would receive an additional $20 a month. Those on an hourly pay scale would receive eight cents more per hour. Sewage plant operators and helpers are-to be given a blanket $11.70 a month increase.
/~ If you suffer MONTHLY
FEMALE PN
nervous feslings, Dain of * - larities”—due to functional monthly disturbances—sh
: : BT |
1
HHT
E Pinkhame V etable It has a £00 %) effect
enough to eat, and who have had to fight the Nazi influence in the schools.”
CAMP IN DESERT
Raise U. S. Flag to Show Appreciation for Help
In Resettlement.
Copyright, 1943, by The Indianapolis Times Py The Chiro Daily News, Inc.
KIRACHI, India, March 1.—The
Stars and Stripes fly from the mast
in the center of a Polish refugee camp in the blazing desert near this western India city. The United States banner was raised recently by sympathetic Poles as a token of their appreciation of
diers and officers in this country. Here, more than 1000 have passed through in the past few months. They are part of the great immigration from Poland through the Soviet Union, which began with the Russo-German occupation of their mother country in 1939. ’ : This is one of two camps for Polish refugees. in India. At Jamnagar, midway between here and Bombay, 400 Polish orphan children brought from Russia are being fed, lodged and educated on land donated by Jaw Sahib. Both camps are maintained by the Polish refugee government with funds provided by the British government. A third will soon be established.
NETHERLANDS UNDER WORK-STARVE POLICY
LONDON, March 1 (U. P.).— Netherlands circles asserted today that German occupation authorities had established a work-or-starve policy for the occupied Netherlands, decreeing that laborers who refused to accept jobs in German war work would be deprived of their ration coupons, These sources said that the number of Netherlands workers outside Holland is between 400,000 and
What You Buy With WAR BONDS
A ship convoy is a wonderful sight to watch steaming out of an American port with munitions, supplies, war equipment and men. Ships camouflaged . . . the pace set to match the slowest merchantman in the convoy . . . sleek grey cruisers
flanking the convoy, speedy destroyers along the edges and a curtain of planes overhead.
‘
It takes months of planning, minute details must be worked out and the cost runs into the millions of dollars. War bonds must help pay for the job. Your purchases, increased if possible, will help. America must not fail in this war to win Victory. “You have done your bit, now do your best.”
PORK PRICE CEILING TO BE SET ON FRIDAY
WASHINGTON, March 1 (U. P.).
prices on pork will be announced hy the office of price administration Friday, OPA officials said today. The new pork ceilings, scheduled actually to come into affect around April 1, will be the first of a series of regulations setting specific dollar and cents prices on a regional basis on all types of meat throughout the country. Officials said ceilings on other types of meat will be announced during the course of the
THEY DIDN'T SEE
—=Specific dollar ‘and cent retail
a
NEW YORK SIGHTS
NEW YORK, March 1 (U. P.)— Geraltline Stevens, 14, and Charlotte McCoy, 13, ran away from Hardy, Ky., to see New York. They stayed four days, but didn’t see anything. Police, forwarned, grabbed them as socn as they got off the train Thursday. They were kept at the
children’s society until yesterday,
our ration points with roger’s Country Club Corn! : Quality-tests prove you can’t buy finer. Sweet, tender, young kernels!
Cream Style Golden Bantam
20-0Z. CAN
next few weeks.
LAVA SOAP gets dirt faster_ easier.
than ordinary soaps ever can_yet amazingly gentle even for women’s use!
plants would receive $17,474.17 in|;
~
ol A sure “go” for
= ve
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TOOTH ENAMEL...
PLUS _SAME SOOTHING INGRED- , IENT AS IN COSTLY FACE CREAMS!
Laval
Fast—yet amazingly gentle wash-up gets hands really clean, dainty...even to remove cosmetics. Leaves skin soothed, smoother,
SULFANILAMIDE, the miracle drug, shows
amazing resulis in Psoriasis treatment. Send 3¢ in stamps te cover mailing of special booklet describing this mew, sim ple and effective treatment for Psoriasis.
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STRETCH
Only 301050 Seconds Ago
arourd nails and knuckles— out it comes with LAVA! Off —gone—in 30 to 50 seconds! And hands feel fine — really clean! Saves towels ~ plenty!
GREASE, RUST, STUBBORN GRIME — ground into skin
IN 30 to 50 seconds—you'll see and feel how LAVA Soap beats ordinary toilet soaps.
Double-action LAVA goes deep—cleans super-fast—gets greasy, ground-in grime—that ordinary wash-ups miss! Out of skin-creases, around the nails—down the drain —instead of on towels! Cleans so
thoroughly, it routs many germs... helps nicks and cuts to heall For Dad—Mom—Kids, too!
Yet—super-speed LAVA is amazingly gentle... even for
little tots’
arms, legs, hands. Lathers creamy-smooth—quick—in hot or cold, hard or soft water . . . leaves skin soothed,
Get LAVA for Dad's extra-dirty Saves money on thorough wash-ups,
hands—the youngsters—yourselfl You'll love it. So buy plenty!
s
