Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 14 April 1943 — Page 11

Dtstons in Plans, ts, Sobol |

. Urged at Annual State © Conference,

Physical fithess in schagls and in-

dustries was stressed

i “The detection, conirol sng cure] 1 or ‘tuberculosis is one of the im-|

UL phases of the whole. pro-

gram of psysical fitness, M. Swibart, Richmond. >: ]

intendent of schools. “Early detection affords the individual affected a better opportunity to befome cured.” Victory corps in schools ean t tuberéulosis workers in pan ap. veys, nutritien camps, clinics and pany Siagnesis campaigns, said W. own, don, Decatur ‘high’ school Industry Meets Problem ~ Industrial health services, social #nd economic status of sanatorium patients and migrant tuberculosis were to be among topics discussed at Bates sessions today. Dr. Edward S. McSweeny, medical director of the New York ‘Telephone Co., told the 400 to the convention last night that industry Was ‘recognizing the tuberculosis problem as. one that directly affected production. He stressed the value of pregp and periodic examina. ions and X-rays of employees and assistance in cures rather than exclusion of affected persons. : Dr. Thomas R. Owens, Muncie, _ Association president, urged that a compulsory hospitalization law should be used with discretion and pplied only to extreme cases. Public information was discussed by Norman Isaacs, managing editor of The Times, at the conference of - $uberculosis secretaries yesterday. The two-day meetings close this afternoon.

ARGENTINA IS SEEN AS FOOD RESERVOIR

NEW YORK, April 1¢ (U. P.).— Neutral Argeptine “may become the food reservoir” which will save millions of people in Burepe from starving to death after the war, former President Herbert C. Hoo- © yer said last night. He spoke at the Thomas Jeffer- - #on bicentennial dinner of the graduate school of journalism at’ Columbia university. The dinner “honored nine Argentine journalists visiting the United States as guests of the National Press club.

You May Never Have ToTake * Another Laxative

Most constipated people might be as 4 as clock-work — if they would gnly quit worrying — stop being nervous — take . more exercise — watch their Hep = and get up mornings an hour. or so earlier to give bowels time to act: But who can or hn to do all this? -. . So~the next best thing is to keep the * bowels working as. comfort- : . ‘ably as we can—an t's Ww! good ol Rapa o Ji Wi? he £3 ight you may at n and expect results pe, morning. ¥ you 750 gat up without po ; do not move the (oa Yeatly as to leave you feeling washed-out . AND because they help give the grand, somfortable, satisfying type of movement that makes the spirits soar —and what pour, constipa person could ask j=

Wendell Lund

Murat theater tomorrow night,

industrial services division of the army; Seaman Tom Fitzsimmons, and Coxswain Mack A. Shippey of {the coast guard. Mr. Lund is to tour the CurtissWright and U. S. Rubber plants before the meeting. Since entering the government service in 1934, Mr. Lund has been |@ssociated with the department of labor, the resettlement administration and the farm security administration. : 10 Days on ‘Raft

. Seaman Fitzsimmons has been & merchant seaman for 25 years and recently spent 10 days on a liferaft after his ship was torpedeed. Coxswain Shippey is on leave after returning from the southern

Coxswain Shippey :

WPB Official and 2 Heroes

To Appear Here Tomorrow

Wendell Lund, director of the labor division of the WPB, will he |Menis but rather “unre among the principal speakers at a Labor for Victory meeting at the|deavors.”

Others who will appear on the program include Col. George E. Strong, Detroit, labor officer of the central procurement district of the army air force material command; Capt. A. ©. Adcorx, Cleveland,

Pacific where he spent two months on Guadalcanal after moving in with the original invasion party. He then made five other trips te the * island after recovering from malaria. He had a narrow escape from heing shot by an American marine during landing operations one night because he was mistaken for a Jap while wearing a shirt seized in a Jap supply store captured by the Americans. Two war department films, “Attack Signal” and “Fire Power,” will be shown at the meeting. Station WIRE will broadcast its 10 o'clock news program from the Murat stage, to be followed by an interview with Mr, Lynd.

Keep Dogs Tied, Gardeners’ Plead

A REQUEST that owners of dogs keep them at home or en leashes to prevent them from pestering victory gardeners was presented to The Indianapolis Times today by the North End Garden club. : In a round table discussion at 8 recent meeting, members point» ed out that many persons have pets that to the neighbors are pests. Definite action against dogs running at large has been promised by Chief of Police Clifford Beeker and Sheriff Otto Petit. Dogs proving a nuisance to neighbors will be taken 0 the city dog pound.

RUSS SEE FILM OF 8TH ARMY VICTORY

packed house saw the premiere of the British documentary film “Desert Victory,” the first allied film of its kind to be shown here during the war, last night. : ‘A personal gift from Prime Minister Winston Churchill to Josef Stalin, the picture will be shown through the country and its premiere indicated it will be a hit

more? Get i at your druggist toda; and take as directed. 25¢.

Tvaling “Lady Hamilton.”

| REGAINED 20 LBS. ON RETONGA, HE STATES: “TELLS OF HAPPY RELIEF

Retired Releva Cos; Tenn,

Farmer Says He Feels Ev.|

giyone Should Knew About Retonga, the Noted Gastric Stomachic and Vitamin B-1

Medicine. Relates His Happy |

Experience.

inser,

The grateful, sincere ° men

women who unhesitatingly, publicly}

. 4ndorse Retonga do so with the sole thought that their 14 ie ed suffer as they 4id 3 — gratifying relief an

Es Tole watever) som:

. achic and Vitamin | B-1 instance, Henry Re farmer, residing for

ue gars hi ow) ome, Gres Bue, ]

how mis-

MR. JIM HENRY BRIGGS mended Retonga. Lam: relieved

- MQSCOW, April 14 (U, P.)—A}!

SIK-DAY WEEK IN MINES URGED

Perkins Proposal Delays Showdown Between FDR and Lewis.

By FRED W. PERKINS Times Special Writer

WASHINGTON, April 14. — A showdown between the Roosevelt administration and John 'L. Lewis over his wage demands for the United Mine Workers was pushed off again today when Secretary of Labor Frances Perkins appealed to bituminous coal operators to guarantee six days’ work a week for their half a million employees.

antee, although, as pointed out by Miss Perkins, OPA has raised ceiling prices on coel to absorb higher costs resulting from paying the miners scale-and-a-half for the sixth day. the government’s plan would increase miners’ wages by $225 a day without changing the hasic pay level. The operators, according to New York geports, would continue to refuse on the basis, as stated by northern spokesman Charles

antee an annual earning. Want WEB to Act Both the northern and soythern| An groups of operators have asserted | tacked to President Roosevelt as well as to Miss Perkins that they believe no agreement can be reached in this dispute through usual collective bargaining. They have urged that the national war labor board take over the controversy, but the labor department has held on to its jurisdiction. The negotiations are heing continued under an eftension agreement which will expire April 30. Mr. Lewis has publicly asserted What his no-strike-in-wartime pledge is “not necessarily binding,” because, he says, the government broke its part of the bargain by allowing a rise in living costs.

Lewis Hints Approval

Miss Perkins said she had been assured by Mr. Lewis he would accept the six-day guarantee “as a basis for an agreement,” but she had not been informed, as reported from New York, that he insisted on six days being guaranteed the year ‘round, for 52 weeks. Nor was she certain whether Mr.

other demands—a general raise of $2 a day, “portal-to-portgl” pay and

and other supervisory mine employees as members. ‘The portal-to-portal proposal apparently is attracting more ‘Wask‘attention, and getting more sympathy for the mine le workers than any other,

James Kembo, 3, of 1514 Garrollbroken jaw after being

slygged ’ {while walking in t near * | railroad Test oh. the

track elevation last might.

The coal operators already have; refused to make the six-day guar-{

It was estimated that|in

O'Neill, that “no industry can guar- Bien.

JAW BROKEN IN SLUGGING a

te Frankiurte git ‘Misuse’ of Modern *Devioes.

WASHINGTON, April 14 (U.B), —Supreme: Court Justice Felix

newspapers, ular polls, the movies , plus the general

. multiplied the

democ-

"Desning democracy as “the reign of regson,” Frankfurter said that the ‘popular will -can “steer a proper course only when sufficiently enlightened to ‘know what is the proper course to steer.” Speaking at the library of congress on the 200th anniversary of Thomas Jefferson’s birth, Frankfurter said that freedom and demeeracy are net final

itting en-

“Reign of Reason”

“The grandeur of the aims of democracy is matched by the difficulties of their achievement,” the justice said. “For democracy is the reign of reason on the most extensive scale. And the difficulties have appailingly multiplied sipce Jefferson’s day. “Not only has our. industrial civilization, which he so feared even in its incipiency, ‘thrown up an intricate range of problems, but the misuse and manipulation of modern devices, chain newspapers, cheap magazines, popular polls, the movies and the radio have enormously enlarged opportunities for ardusing passions, confusing judgment and regimenting opinion. “And we now know how slender a reed is reason—how recent its emergence in men, how deep the countervailing instincts and passions, how treacherous the whole rational process.”

Statesmen’s Task

The ultimate fask of statesmanship today, Frankfurter said, is to translate “edifying notions about the dignity of man into their, fulfillment.” Frankfurter 100k | issue with those who might quote Jefferson's statements as “precepts for the solution of specific probiems which he never could have contempla “He was concerned with the abolition of unnecessary social restraints,” Frankfurter said, “and could hardly foresee that this is not at all identical with the creation of necessary social control.” To treat Jefferson’s remarks “as justifications for resisting the pressure for freedom in the intricate new context of the social forces of our day,” the justice said, “is to reduce the sweep of Jefferson’s spirit to our own littleness.”

" . y Communiques NORTH AFRICAN COMMUNIQUE Yesrordrs™ upd Apel 14. 1 5 the army continued their vance to north and meade contact with enemy preBigher fe hetygn Enfidaville and the

re French forces continued thelr net e. The sare army made further advances the El Bab-Munchar section in ‘the face of my opposition. AIR terday and during the previous ions of the nertnwest nigh git 5 #iE 1 TESEat ions

orcs were largely dir % a ir the. DI igh : of April 12-13, bombezs and tactical "air force a force attack Tunisia, where fires

ing forth es attacked Mio Castelvetrano in hly covered

wk

of the idee and the enemy ai were star Yesterday,

Wo formati ortre a acked by enemy fighters, four of 8 it destro oyed ER sirfleld in Tunisia Nas a

edium started a two aE or aft ers Ne

vere

tactom all over e course of which as ‘pnemy aircra was destroyed. Late yesterday afternoon, s formation do rs was inter-

were Pci to jet tison the son earl er in the over the During the night of rid ‘12-13, on epemy ber was destroyed. From al these operations, three of our aircraft are missing,

NAVY COMMUNIQUE 342

SOUTH PACIFIC: (All dates east Longitude).

} SPAR Hi ing. Li a even P-38) apd Corsa ov Vast} r rafed Rebate 4 bay. ad. pumber of Japanese anti-

en ing fortr 1 a

Rall In Pritea to unfavorable we prack were unobserved 7(e) D

return, apparently ar Results of t, & i

PBY) island,”

Lewis would accept the six-day|th guarantee as a substitute for his}i.,

the union’s right to enroll foremen j Ameri

fense, w oan in her darkest hour and proved a

£ RSE JOATION = PLAN DEFEATED ee

Citizens Protest, Sos i

sion Refuses Slaughtering Permit.

Sentimental objections 10 slaughtering horses fer meat were expressed by - mere than & score of | Draltas residents the operation of g harse abattoir east of Indign- | apolis ‘hefore the county plan com-

Mr. Trotsky for several months had been killing horses to provide meat for his minks and planned to expand the operation to provide canned dog and cai food for the open market.

‘We Love Horses’

John L. Linder, spokesman for a large ‘delegation of residents living in the community of the mink farm, assailed the proposed abhttoir as “almost criminal to us in the neighborhood.” “We love horses in our neighborhood . . . they have helped build our community up to what it is today and we don’t like sit in’ © homes and watch — be nauled to slaughter every day,” ‘Mr. er said. “The slaughtering gperations|ov would ‘Attract buzzards, crows and swarms of flies to our Homes and|’ pefore the summer is over our communify would be known as ‘buzzards corner’ if this slaughtering plant is allowed to operate.” Other Besidents Object A score of other residents of the neighborhood voiced gbjections to slaughtering horses in their community for sentimental TeAsons, they said, as well’ as sanitary reasons. The commission voted ungnimously against gente a Zone variance to Mr. Trotsky for the plant, explaining that the land in that vi-

hig could get control of Gibraltar and the Mediterranean, he could stall off | if an gllied invasion of southern En-|| rope as’long as he could hold op. The stake is so high that Hitler|} might gamble for it. “Quick syccess|| could enable Rommel to hold out in Funigia, since it would cause a serious diversion of allied strength in

North “Africa lines from the

prise’ beyond his grasp. Best allied opinion is that Hitler|} will" try fo block allied control of the Central Mediterranean bottleneck by concentrating on Sicily and Sardinia. That may be what Navy Secretary Knox referred to when he said ‘we still have to “clean up in the Mediterranean. »

—Three thousand diers sitgod by today ready for

Spain--tmeaning a drive for Gi- [I braltar—presents a more workable | possibility, from Hitler’s viewpoint. | The venture would have to be undertaken soon, before Rommel is thrown | if out of Africa. After that, it would be futile.

Yo pa

cannot afford to let the

ranean a 3) struggle. If Hit-

the eastern entrance to

od disrupt supply Gibraltar “Fough’

With or without Gen. Francisco! || 's co-operation, Hitler could '{ march through Spain. Resistance by |{f the indifferently-equipped i army would not be great. The allies, however, would quickly move from |} French ‘into Spanish Morocco and | Ur | probably not; have much greater dif-|{f

than Hitler would in Spain. fi upshot would be that Hitler might

but find Gibraltar a

SOLDIERS STAND BY

FOR STRIKE DUTY

ARVIDA, Quebec, April 14 (U.R.).

duty in event a “strike

emergency | threat by A. F. of L. union workers| | at the big Aluminum Co. of Canada 1 plant materializes. The Aluminum Workers of Amer- il

ry of the Mediter- ||

Canadian sol-| i}

SE 2k ORS “| ?

a

FEET

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Carrect timing takes on new importance these days — particularly when it helps vital wartime transportation. When a trip for well-earned rest or recuperation or for business is necessary, time it right — go before the mid-summer rush when travel is heavily concentrated in a two-month period, or postpone your travel until after this peak season. By helping to even-up travel, you make it possible for eyery bus seat to work full time on every trip. : Buses will serve you better, also, if you pick mid-week days nd choose, from the many daily i s, the buses Which usually have more seats available. it's smart to get this and other wartime travel information

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