Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 1 June 1943 — Page 3
{ Vv 1 | | i 1 Hi II
NS PLEDGE TO END HUNGER
Goveming System Adopted For, Pefmanent Setup | To Feed World.
| HOT SPRINGS, Va. June 1 (U. P.).—The united nations food conference virtually completed its work today with approval of a declaration of principles and adoption of a governing system for the permanent rganization which will work toward € objective of a better fed world. th actions still require the sanction of a plenary session, but that was regarded as only a for- _ mality since the sentiment of the \tonference has been clearly defined ‘committee sessions and in the work [of the men who have drafted the final resolutions. | The completed results of this conference will reflect the care and preparation given to it by the rican representatives, whose road objectives at the outset have more than two weeks of inten-
give, work been upheld and trans-|-
lated into formal action by the representatives of 44 nations,
Jones Anticipated Declaration
The declaration of principles was enticipated by Judge Marvin Jones, chairman of the American delegation and president of the conference, the day after the conference
- gpened, on May 19. At that time
1. was revealed that the American delegation believed the conference
should issue a “ringing declaration”}
to the world that the allied nations intended to accept a new responsibility for seeing that their people are better fed. That declaration has now been completed. It has gone through
some 35 revisions in drafting com-|.
mittees until its language is believed to have been fitted into the spirit of sincerity and confidence which these delegates wish to carry to the world.
Interim Body Set Up
It conveys a message of cheer to Sal nourished people everywhere, edging that the nations ipvolved Be gee to it that surplyses are
{
nev | again wasted and hat in|’
time hunger will be eliminated from the world. .| The governing system of the permanknt organization which will grow out ‘of this first united na-
tions conference begins with the
"arrangement for an interim food
commission which will be established not later than July 15, probably | in Washington. |The interim commission will deve lop into a permanent internaonal food office which will carry} on under the keynotes struck here, / gathering and disseminating infor- ’ mation on improved nutritional standards, supplies and production of food; the care of special sections of the population, and in time probably | developing into an advisory body for improving diets and, in genetal, raising the standards of living throughout the world. The conference secretariat last night made public the full texts of section recommendations which were made available in summary
| cation and action in this field.
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
ORK OF FOOD PARLEY VIRT UALLY F INISHED |
mtoree
headed for its target on the South of plane is seen (right) as bomb
Bombs Way l—Target Hit
Down from the bomb-bay of a Flying Fortress goes a deadly missle
Pacific waters below. The shadow nears the water on this dress re-
hearsal for a future mission against the Japs.
And here’s the result—a direct hit on the derelict ship that was the target of this bomb practice off the New Guinea coast.
NEW WILMINGTON, Pa., June 1 (U, P.).—A comprehensive program for church co-operation in problems growing out of world war II was ad-
vanced today in a series of resolutions adopted at the closing session of the 85th general assembly of the United Presbyterian Church in North America. . The assembly of 200 delegates, representing more than 200,000 members, recommended that each church make provisions in its program this year to study the basis of a just and durable peace and asked for co-op-eration with all interdenominational agencies in their programs of edu-
form Sunday.
Your: Health
Rest and Moist Dressings Help Strained Ligaments
&
& few moments’ discomfort -and ing, to those involving actual rupture of the ligament, which re‘quires weeks to heal. 3 The ankle: joint is most :
{ frequently
sprained, be- ; cause it bears the weight of the body and i subject to the : greatest strain : and labor. For | the same reagon, #& sprained ankle is most disabling of all such injuries. The ankle joint is supported on both sides by strong ligaments, tut those on the inside of the @nklp are generally. the strongest. Therefore, strains usually occur when the foot is rocked inward. Fractures are more frequent. when the foot is wrenched away from the midline. The initial pain of such a sprain 4s often severe and sometimes causes nausea or fainting. ' It becomes difficult or impossible to bear the weight on the strained gnkle. Gradually a puffy swelling develops about the point, and
By DR. THOMAS D, MASTERS | Sprains are usually partial, but sometimes complete, tears of some of the supporting ligaments of a joint. These occur when the joint is forced beyond its normal range of movement. I the ligament is torn, the extra stretch may save the bone it is attached to. If the ligament is stronger and resists the strain, the bone is likely to be broken. Sprains vary greatly, from those causing
in War-Time
later the skin becomes. “black and blue,” because of the tearing of the blood vessels and the presence of free blood under the skin. There is usually much less discoloration with a sprain than with a fracture, but the pain covers a wider area with a strain, The pain of a fracture is ordinarily localized to the point of the break. These signs are not too reliable, however, and if any question exists, an X-ray should always be taken.
When the injury is caused by rolling the foot inward, the ligaments on the outside of the ankle are torn. The treatment requires that these ligaments be placed at rest. . The foot is therefore turned outward, and held there with adhesive or a strong, elastic putteetype of bandage. When the swelling and pain are not too severe, walking perhaps with the assistance of a cane is desirable. With more severe pains, the victim should stay off his foot for 24 to 48 hours, while applying warm, moist dressings. When the acute pain has passed, the ankle may be supported as above and
walking resumed with a limp.
RATIONING DATES
| | Canned Goods Blue Stamps G, H and J expire June 7. Blue Stamps K, L and M expire July 7. Meat Red Stamps J and K are good; L becomes good June 6; M, June 13; N, June 30. All expire June 30, Is Coffee Stamp 24 is Eon for one pound
Shoes Stamp 17 good for one pair through June 15. Stamp 18 becomes good for one pair June 16. 5 Gasoline Stamp 6 in A book expires July 21. ; Tires
Second Inspection Deadline: A book vehicles by Sept. 30; B's by June 30; commercial vehicles every 60 days or 5000 miles, Whichever is
first.
i Ny
Presbyterians Plan Church Aid on Post-War Problems
Secretary of War Stimson and Secretary of the Navy Knox were commended for reducing Sunday labor in the army and navy to the measure of strict necessity and for their encouragement of men in the services to attend church services on the Sabbath. The assembly commended the government, industry and labor for the progress that has been made in removing racial barriers from military service and war industry and urged that these efforts be continued. The church group also .commended civil and military authori-|g ties for their sympathetic handling |F of the American-Japanese in their evacuation and confinement and the federal council of churches for
its ministry to these Japanese. It|y
urged that serious study be given to the problem of resettlement and return of those groups to normal life after the war.
GIRL DIES IN CRASH
WAYNE, Ind, June 1 (U. arjorie Taylor, 13, Detroit, led when the automobile in he was riding careened out rol yesterday.
FT
C Candidates’ Tests Are
Similar to Ones for Draftee
a special test for radiotelegraph op-|-
By" Science Service
WASHINGTON, June 1.-—Psy-chological tests are given women applying for acceptance in - the WAAC by the same section of the adjutant general’s office that administers tests to men selected by local boards for army service, but the tests differ in several respects. They are described in the new issue of Science.
The first given the women is a mental alertness test to screen out the unfit. It includes items of six types: Information, vocabulary, arithmetic, judgment, proverb interpretation and comprehension of graphs and tables. This is followed by a classification test, an aptitude test, and a proficiency test. The classification test is smiliar to that. given the men. The aptjtude tests used concern mechanical
‘which is rapidly bringing us to: a
60P POST-WAR GROUP NAMED
Spangler Appoints 49 to Draft Realistic Peace
Program.
WASHINGTON, June 1 (U. P.).— Republican National Committee Chairman Harrison E. Spangler today ‘announced appointment of a 49-member Republican post-war advisory council to develop “a realistic peace-time program for American progress.” : He said the council—composed of members of congress, governors and party officials—will submit recommendations to the national committee prior to the next G. O. P. national convention, All Republican leaders will be consulted on the program, he said, including former President Herbert Hoover and the last two G. O. P. presidential nominees, former Governor Alf M. Landon of Kansas and Wendell L. Willkie. Outstanding
spokesmen for agriculture, labor and industry also will be consulted, he added.
v
J
Victory Comes First
,“Although the winning of the war is our first concern,” Spangler said, “the Republican party is intensely interested in the tremendous problems, both foreign and domestic, which will face us when victory comes.” These problems, he said, “will arise as an aftermath of the war, accentuated by our 10-year debacle under the reactionary new deal.” . “The problem of a lasting world peace must be met courageously and realistically,” he said. “We must approach this in a spirit of friendly co-operation with the other nations of the world, keeping in mind the welfare of our own country.” The council, Spangler said, “must plan for an abundance as against the new deal philosophy of scarcity
condition where our people will be hungry.” “We must plan to create instead of destroy,” he said. Spangler said the council was organized with the co-operation of Senator Charles L. McNary of Oregon and Rep. Joseph W, Martin Jr., of Massachusetts, Republican leaders of the senate and house, respectively. He said it will hold a meeting soon “at g central point.”
» Its members are: Senators—McNary, Arthur W. Vandenberg of Michigan, Albert Hawkes of New Jersey, Robert A. Taft of Ohio and Warren R. Austin of Vermont.
Representatives—Martin, Albert E. Carter of California, Everett M. Dirksen of Illinois, Charles Halleck of Indiana, Clifford R. Hope of Kansas, Edith Nourse Rogers of Massachusetts, Roy O. Woodruff of Michigan, August H. Andresen of Minnesota, Louis E. Miller of Missouri, Daniel A. Reed of New York, Frances P. Bolton of Ohio and Carroll Reece of Tennessee.
Governors — Earl Warren of California, John Vivian of Colorado, Raymond E. Baldwin of Connecticut, Walter W. Bacon of Delaware, A. Bottolfsen of Idaho, Dwight H. Green of Hlinois, Bourke B. Hickenlooper of Iowa, Andrew Schoeppel of Kansas, Sumner Sewall of Maine, LevSrett Saltonstall of Massachusetts, Harry Kelly of Michigan, Ed Thye of Minnesota, Forest C. Donnell of Missouri, Sam C. Ford of Montana, Dwight Griswold of Nebraska, Robert O. Blood of New Hampshire, Thomas E. Dewey of New York, John W. Bricker of Ohio, Earl Snell of Oregon, Edward Martin of Pennsylvania, Sharpe of South Dakota, William H. Willis of Vermont, Arthur B. Langlis of Washington and Walter 8. Goodland of Wisconsin.
Party Officials-~ReD, J William Ditter of Pennsylvania, chairman of the Republican congressional campaign committee; former Senator John G. Townsend Jr. of Delaware, chairman of the Republican senatorial campaign committee; Clarence Budington Kelland, national committeeman from Arizona’ Henry Leonard, national committeeman from Colorado; Mrs’ Bertha Baur, national committeewoman from Illinois; Mrs. Dudley C. Hay, national committeewoman from Michigan; Dan Whetstone, national committeeman from
aptitudes, clerical aptitudes, and
IN INDIANAPOLIS
HERE IS THE TRAFFIC RECORD
FATALITIES County City Total 18 34
Inju : MONDAY TRAFFIC COURT Cases Convic- Fines
Violations Tried tions Paid ing 0 0
i : Failure to stop a a signal 0 Drunken drivin 0 others
Totals
EVENTS TODAY
Rotary club, luncheon meeting, Claypool hotel, noon. Animal Welfare League, Inc, Central library, 8 p. m. Women's Republican club, N. Delaware st. 8 p. m.
meeting,
meeting, 2012
Montana, and H. Alexander Smith, national committeeman from New Jersey.
erators. The particular mechanical aptitude test given the women is
known in the army as MA-4, It includes the recognition of tools and an understanding of mechanics. The clerical aptitude tests are intended to determine aptitudes and ability in general clerical work. The radiotelegraph operator aptitude test is the army ROA-1, X-1, which contains 156 items each consisting of two code patterns sounded in succession. The person being tested indicates if the two patterns are the same or different. These code items are on phonograph records to facilitate group testing. Written and oral tests are then given to test the women in radio repair work, automobile repair and other matters requiring mechanical
skill,
0 ig Henry, Mildred Kolks,
girls. Girls Robért, Mary Batt, at St. Francis. Francis, Helen Collins, at St. Francis. Noel, Ruby Cord, at St. Francis. Michael, Nora Crowe, at St. Francis. Edward, Katherine Kirchner, at Prancis. James, Betty Coon, at City. Joseph, Thelma Fairves, at St. Vincent's. John, Carolyne O'Neal, at St. Vincent's. Paul, Irene Robb, at St. Vincent's. Emery, Katie Roe, at St. Vincent's. Louis, Alameda Long, at Coleman. Harvey, Ruby Bailey, at Methodist. William, Irene Featherstone, at Methodist. G. B. Catherine Jackson | Jr., at Meth-
Virgil, ‘Mary Martin, at Methodi Lloyd, Wilma Tomlinson, at Methodist. Herald, Clara Payman, at Methodist. Boys { Gilbert, Violetta Pridle, at St. Prines. Edward, Ruby Wamtler, at St. Francis. William, Marta v as St. Francis. a .
at St. Francis,
St.
Ft. Way: ) Indian anolis
Wilma Fo!
t's. | O
Balloons Used to Guard Small Ships
their “hangar,”
AER RRS
Lined up like a train in a station, these 3 voval navy Patloons are awaiting duty in the inflation shed that is : They protect small vessels from air attack.
DROP 36 TONS ON JAP BASE
Yanks Carry Out Their Biggest Raid So Far On Lae.
ALLIED HEADQUARTERS, Australia, June 1 (U. P.).—Allied bombers dropped 36 tons of explosives, including 1000-pounders, on Lae in the biggest raid ever directed against that northwest New Guinea Japanese base, a communique said today. ee HO The Lae attack was a continuation of the hammering given New Guinea coastal strongpoints while stormy weather that started a week ago hampered long-range operations. ; A spokesman said Lae installations were damaged heavily, particularly the terrace area, formerly a residential section but now believed to be used for military purposes. Liberators carried out the raid early yesterday and all returned safely despite anti-aircraft fire. Long-range fighters destroyed an enemy bomber and damaged a fighter on the ground in a strafing attack on the airdrome at Langgoer, in the Kai islands, and shot down one of six Zeros that tried to ine tercept them. A single plane bombed the Finsch harbor area of New Guinea.
PLAN DRIVE TO END MOSQUITO MENAGE
The state health board and U.S. public health service: tomorrow wi begin an intensive drive to stam out malaria-carrying mosqui which are breeding abundantly Indiana. The first step will be an aerial survey’ of ‘dead streams, those which have no drainage after recent swells and in which the mosquitoes spreading the dreaded disease hatch rapidly. Tomorrow’s survey will cover the northern half of the state. Another will be made in the southern half later after flood-swollen rivers and other streams have receded. Heading the survey will be Joseph L. Quinn, chief sanitary engineer of the state health board, and Lt. G. R. Christianson of the U, S. public health service. : Dr. Thurman B. Rice, acting director of the state health board, said ‘'malaria-control problems have been increasing in Indiana during the last year.
TAKE BRIEF RECESS IN DEMPSEY TRIAL
WHITE PLAINS, N. Y., June 1 (U. P).—Trial of the Dempsey divorce suit was recessed for several hours today to permit counsel to produce a physician to affirm the “complete nervous collapse” of Mrs. Hannah Williams Dempsey, who failed to appear when the case resumed this morning, Supreme Court Referee J. Addison Young denied a motion by Mrs. Dempsey’s attorney, Gerald Donovan, for an adjournment of one week,
OFFICIAL WEATHER
U. 8. Weather Burean
(All Datd in Central War Time) Sunrise 5:18 | Sunset : TEMPERATURE —June 1, 1942— Ta. mh sees, TH] 2Ppom, oosiens 20 wresipiliten3 24 YE RT 30a. m. Tr.
Total precipitation since Jan. 1 17.57 Excess since Jan. 1 .39
The following table shows the Tempe ture in other cities:
Cseeasse
hicago .. Cincinnati Cleveland
Kansas City, Mo. iz. ee.
STUKAS RAID. MERCY TRAINS, YANK SAYS
FT. DEVENS, Mass, June 1 (U. P.). — Dive-bombing Nazi Stukas showed no mercy for first-aid stations, hospitals or hospital trains even though these were plainly marked, a wounded American soldier said today in describing his adventures on North African battlefields. He was Pvt. Franklin Ledbetter of Statesville, N. C., and New York City, driver of a half-track in the First Armored division, who was interviewed at Lovell general hospital. Ledbetter, who landed with the first allied wave at St. Cloud, said enemy bombers machine-gunned
~
/
/| /
Strauss Says—
him as he lay on a stretcher on the battlefield. Dive bombing interrupted medical treatment for three hours, he said.
HUNT FLYING FORT WRECKED ON PEAK
PYOTE, Tex. June 1 (U, P,).— Military authorities at Rattlesnake bomber base here awaited news today from a rescue crew attempting to reach the wreckage of a Flying
Fortress which crashed atop a mountain 50 miles north of Van Horn Sunday. Fate of the 11 passengers aboard the plane was not known, The plane was definitely identified late yesterday as a ship earlier reported missing from the base, \
*
NEARER
DURING HOLIDAY
Week-End Is One of Safest Memorial Days Since Horse and Buggy.
Three fatalities yesterday increased Indiana's violent death toll for the double Memorial day holiday to 12. William Dorseline, 87, Fulton county assessor for 16 years, was killed when his stalled automobile was struck by a Chesapeake & Ohio train near Kewanna. Marjorie Taylor, 13, of Detroit, : was killed when the car in which she was a passenger owerturned near Ft. Wayne. Joseph Renaldi, 65, was said by
{authorities to have hanged himself
in his Elkhart home.
By UNITED PRESS The nation celebrated one of its safest ‘Memorial day week-ends since the automobile replaced the horse and buggy, a State-Dy-state survey showed. The accidental death toll for the three-day holiday stood at 144, compared with last year’s total of 350 deaths. Gasoline rationing, the $85-mile r hour speed limit and an abbreviated holiday for war workers were important factors in the safety record. Traffic accidents killed Ti. persons, far less than the normal peace-time total. Miscéllaneous accidents claimed the lives of 38 persons, and 35 others drowned. As in previous years, California led the 48 states, reporting 19 dead. Seventeen were killed in Highway mishaps. Indiana was second with 12 killed, seven of them in automobiles.
TERRY MOORE JOINS ARMY
BALBOA, C. Z, June 1 (U. P.).— Terry Moore, former outfielder for the St. Louis Cardinals, was sworn into the army air force this morning at headquarters at Quarry Heights, and was inducted immediately.
VICTORY)
GENTLEMEN
White India Tan Bamboo Maize
Laks Blue Xxx Long Sleeves XXX
Small Medium Large Extra Large
Mail and Phone Orders Filled
A SPORT, SHIRT » THAT HAS ABOUT
EVERYTHING IN IT—EXCEPTING YOU!
AND YOU ought to get into it—to
make the record complete!
The fabric is a Cotton CHAMBRAY—
that washes almost as easily
handkerchief—and ‘always comes up—-
fresher than its original stat
And it's a fabric that has PLEN
ENDURANCE. It's FEATH keep you cool! — to allow th
e. ENTY OF ERLIGHT to
e breezes
through to you! It's SANFORIZED— to keep it from. shrinking (beyond
a measly 29%). AND IT RAISES A MAN'S
ap
APPEARANCE (whereas some Sports
Shirts—sorry to say—wreck
it).
"Donegal" has a way of lining a collar and cuffs that gives them body — and staying quality — And the SHIRTS ARE FINISHED so that when worn open have a neat and complete look.
2.00
(Can be worn in or out)
