Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 26 May 1943 — Page 22
PAGE 22
RUSS GET BULK (One of Them Will Be Howe OF MUNITIONS
U. 8. Now Outbiulding Axis, F. D. R. Says in Report I On Lend-Lease. |
WASHINGTON, May 25 (U. P). | ~—President Roosevelt, report ing that lend-lease aid through April | 3 totaled $11,102.000,000, told congress today that more lend-lease muni-. : tions have been sent to Soviet Rusgia than to Great Britain, and that the United States is “outbuilding the aggressors in every category of arms.” ; In transmitting a report covering lend-lease operations through April 80 last, Mr. Roosevelt asserted thal arms are accumulating for offensives “that will end only in Berlin and Tokyo.” Great Britain still ranks first as the recipient of all lend-lease shipments—8$3,116,000,000 since March 11, 1941. Lend-lease shipments to, the Soviet Union through April 1) 1943, totaled $1,822,000,000, not | counting “many hundreds of planes!
Joan Eschmever Lois Van Aredonk
FILIBUSTER ON | POLL TAX SEEN g
: Southern Senators Pledges Aid to China | i A 5 Actual munitions exports to Buss Say They I Talk the gia — ordnance, ammunition, tanks, ¢ the like—totaled $1.-| Bill to Death. ¢ 041,000,000, compared with $881.-] _ ig { 000,000 of like equipment to Great] WASHINGTON, May 26 (U. P).— |: Britain. [Five senators from southern states The report promised: said today that they would filibuster 1. Unconditional surrender of the to death a house-approved bill
hg Allied i ‘ |making it unlawful for states to : leq strategy “to win . . . ; | &s quickly as possible—in Rome and make Payment of a poll tax res Berlin and Tokyo.” | requisite for voting. ! 3. Increased lend-lease to China| The major issue over which southWith reopening of the Burma road ern senators are incensed is alleged | “among the strategic objectives of usurpation of states rights by the! our forces.” ; : | federal government. Northern sup- | As lend-lease moves ahead in its [porters of the bill charge that south- | hird year, our armed forces, our erners fear franchisement of gupplies, and the combined efforts Negroes and poor whites. | ©f the united nations are driving] The bill applies only to voting ahead to complete victory over the at elections for national offices. enemy.” Mr. Roosevelt said in his! The house passed the anti-poll tax letter of transmittal. bill, 265 to 110, late yesterday after Describing the liberation of Africa lan American sailor, perched on a 8s a forerunner of the future, the gallery railing denounced the house
planes and
Jane Gossom
Nomination of five candidates for Howe high school Violet Queen was announced today. Candidates are Miss Lucille Broeking, Miss Joan Eschmeyer, Miss Jane Gossom, Miss Ruth Ann Robison and Miss Lois Van Aredonk. The queen will be chosen by the student body to rule the annual ground breaking celebration to be held Friday on the school campus.
Lucille Broeking
em a — — Violet Queen JWI WARNS OF (Business Asks OPA Sanity, CANNING CRISIS
a
WEDNESDAY, MAY 26, 1943
| Views Shortage of Workers As Serious Threat to
'43 Food Supply.
| WASHINGTON, May 26 (U. P.). —Wastage of crops and a tightened | supply of canned and processed | foods is probable unless sufficient | manpower is available when the] canning season begins. The office of war information | said today that this threat to the food supply could be averted only | through an “extraordinarily effec- | tive” recruitment of new workers | and the maintenance of a nucleus | of experienced workers in each local | ‘cannery. Efforts already are being made by government agencies and civilian | groups to insure sufficient = power as the need arises. During the canning season last| year, the OWI said, only super- | human efforts of volunteers filled | the labor gap in some communities | where the draft and the change of workers to higher<paying war jobs| had depleted the usual supply. In|
(other localities, tons of food rotted! because of the lack of sufficient! workers. Much of the Ohio and Indiana tomato crop spoiled be- | cause of a sudden ripening and a | labor shortage. | “This year,” said the OWT,
| |
“the
[normal reserve of experienced local |
: | canning labor shows signs of seri-| - ‘ous depletion,
Ruth Ann Robison
All candidates are members of the Vihota elub, junior girls’ social organization. Don Auble, a member of the Hi-Y club, has been chosen phil« osopher, Highlight of the festival will be a dance, sponsored by the Girls’ Athletic association, in the school gymnasium. Al Weifeopf and his orchestra will play for the event.
president looked toward the coming for “fighting the Civil War all over”) battles for Germany and Japan and and shouted, “why should a man | placed great importance on “the pay a tax to vote when he can fight full support and the full resources] without paying a tax?” | of the peoples of the newly lib- | |
EE NAME DIRECTOR FOR
The report emphasized aid sent to the Soviet Union, explaining in |
one portion that “although we! have sent a substantial number of!
Constance Bennett Arrives Tomorrow for Bond Rally
Movie Actress Constance Bennett will arrive at 6 a. m. tomorrow at Municipal airport to take part in the American Legion's w rally tomorrow evening at the Coliseum. 4 x Lieut. and Mrs. Charles Farrell of Hollywood will arrive later in the : planes under lend-lease to thel : y ! : ’ . : . sae |C2KEN to Methodist hospital. united kingdom. a much greater | Gonard A. Felland of Indianapo- day. Lt. Farrell, who played opposite Janet Gaynor in many movies, |
ill be featured on the rally program with Miss Bennett.
: w ¥ <Q ” ~ s “yr Si k . . has gone to the Soviet | olis, former sate upervisor of the Miss Bennett is on a nation-wide) WPA educational program, has
Quantity Union.’
Russ Get More Food . : ried | Included in shipments to Russia | gency day care service, recently Question-and-answer interview over |
Station WISH at 1:45 p. m. to-!ghow finale.
“thousands
of planes, established to care for children of | day-working mothers, Lt. Farrell and jeeps and other military motor ve- | Charles W. Jones, committee arrive from Peru, where she hicles, hundreds of thousands of chairman of the organization, said Visiting him. He is now stationed Miles of field telephone wire, sev-|jast night at a meeting in the OCD Se naval air training Saucon! eral million pairs of army boots], t % Map! . that the . : . hundreds of thousands of tons ry hi yh a au V a Hundreds of soldiers and sailors, of armor plate, steel, aluminum.
. " formals will be a part of the floor copper, zine, TNT . {work through neighborhood and A heavy recent increase in food (show that precedes a grand march
thipments to Russia also was re. CC volunteer eivie up be #204 a military ball at the coliseum | 0 — : > | The service, he said, wil fi- rally. | ported. 7 : mo nanced partly through the war emer-| ‘phe grand entrance which will No breakdown was available Of |gency and Indianapolis Community aid to Sleine DEA nee lena Fund, and partly through fees col- | will feature a company-front dem- | lease exports were lumped in WM lected from mothers utilizing the | those in India, Australia and New facilities. Locations will be ane Zealand. But exports to all of nounced at a later date.
those countries, however, totaled
have been
many tens of thousands of trucks. his wife will
{
naval armory bluejaekets.
only $875,000,000—about two-thirds of the total being the value of munitions sent into the Pacific war area. GETS 2 TO 21 YEARS FOR KILLING FATHER TIPTON, Ind. Nay 26 (U. P) — Tipton county authorities indicated today that Jack Kleyla, 18-vear-old Tipton youth, would be taken to the Indiana state reformatory at Pendleton Thursday to begin a two-to-21-year term for manslaughter. Kleyla was sentenced in Tipton | circuit court yesterday by Judge | Frank B. Russell immediately after) & jury of 11 men and one woman| returned a verdict of guilty of] voluntary manslaughter. | The youth had been accused of first-degree murder in connection with the shooting of his father.) Robert Kleyia, after an argument] three weeks ago. He entered a plea of temporary Insanity to the charge. A sanity commission appointed by the court declared Kleyla sane, but admitted he may have been temporarily unbalanced.
are releasing men in our Armed Services for more active duty... helping on the production front to build more Ships, Planes, Tanks and Guns... making good everywhere,
SET YAMAMOTO RITES By UNITED PRESS Funeral services for Admiral I'soroku Yamamoto, commander in chief of the Japanese navy who was killed in action in the South Pacific, will be held Saturday, June 5. The Tokyo radio said last night. Tokyo said Yamamotos ashes would be placed in a tomb facing the Imperial palace.
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5 po y WwW 1 operation of day centers, but will and 300 Liberty Belles. gowned in €
Pulliam,
‘onstration of the manual of arms|p ‘by both Ft. Harrison troops and lo
| war bond rally tour for the treasury will be posted following the cere{been named director of the emer- department. She is scheduled for a! mony. From the opening to the floor stages will |sWirl around among colored floodlights and spots to present talent S| from both Camp Atterbury and Ft. Harrison,
portable
Caravan of Peeps
Miss Bennett will make a grand ntrance in a caravan of peeps and will receive greetings from Fred Hasselbring, mander; Homer E. Capehart, chair. | {man of the rally, and Eugene OC.| THE TIMES | state executive chairman (open the program proper at 8 p. m. of the war savings staff, The rally will close with dancing y the audience to music by two rchestras—the Billings band and Colors (the Camp Atterbury “Cannoneers.”
legion district
OVER 5,000,000 WAVES, WOMEN WAR WORKERS AND WAACS
rar bond by
com- |
terf]
exceeding that of 1942, yet the demand for canned | and processed foods will be far greater than ever before.”
5 RECOVERING FROM COLLISON INJURIES
Five persons today were recovering from injuries received in a | truck-auto collision yesterday at Raymond st. and Churchman ave. The auto driver, Dr. Joseph P| | Worley, 1911 Kessler blvd, was ar{rested on a charge of failure to stop at a preferential st. | The four in the truck who were hurt were John S. Niggle Jr, 17: his father; Roger Wichtman, 3. and [Sidney Obenchain, 67, all of 2522 | Station st. | John Rothwell, 48, of 431 N. Ilinois st, was injured when’ struck a trackless trolley in Massa|chusetts ave, 700 block. He was
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House today for clarification of against inflation. There's a much || DON'T SELL Your
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Amid the criticism, OPA’s deputy| The house Democratic leadership, | LINCOLN STATE PAWNERS
administrator, J. K. Galbraith, Te*| nevertheless, was understood to ad- | torted that interests determined to vocate dismembering OPA and | COR. CAPITOL and WASHINGTON STS. break down price control were wag- | transferring its functions to Cd er — re ing “guerrilla warfare” against the | agencies—food rationing to the war |[=—— SPEC |AL Rgency: He asked the public to!gonq administration, other ration-|J Felt . ght it. ing to the office of civilia -| The case of OPA was before ONT | rer ers Rote | congressional committees, g Cc One was the senate agriculture] ReDP. Merlin Hull (Prog. Wis.) | subcommittee organized to study prepared a report for the senate Cleaned & he OPA order to roll back retail|@8riculture subcommittee today on | Blocked ) prices of butter, meats and coffee | Subsidies. He contended that un- § —— FACTORY METHOD —— through subsidy payments to necessary losses would be suffered OHID HATTERS processors. by butter processors if the pro- | CLEANERS Wants Housecleaning hosed 10 per cent consumer price | \s 47 w. omI0 18 S. ILL. Albums and Frames All Sizes and Styles
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