Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 21 September 1943 — Page 3
“letter submitted by Mr. Sullivan, and signed by Dr. Carleton B. gCulloch, receiver of the Dea= | coness property. “Don’t you realize,” Mr, Sullivan asked council, “that continued use
of the old Fletcher sanitarium as | there
‘an isolation hospital would entail pouring thousands of dollars in into a building that was ‘unsuitable in the first place?” ‘Ma has recently exintention of transferr4 ward facilities from | the sanitarium on E. Market st, to a roomier nw more modern lo-
while last night it looked . Lucien B. Meriwether would solid voting bloc the thus far presented administration ' when
nd crs to sign a for city employ-
‘dorse the resolution in committee, ‘but last minute pressure by Council
Calls for Job Survey . "City Purchasing - Agent. Edward ~ Hereth stumped for the measure because, he said, “it's high time we
pull the feather beds out from un- | ages.
ier some of theys soft jobs on the ov “PRYPOIEM =~ vine
Dr. Meriwether inquired, wif the
urvey is purported to be such a . good thing, why hasn't it been- done: efore?”
“Because no other council has had
The resolution calls for a job - survey because “the number, duties and pay of city officials never have
Corsica'’s Fall
{tion concerning the treatment of
DESCRIBES AXIS |g
PRISON CAMPS
Red Cross Worker Tells of Captured Yanks in “Europe. The audience was quiet. Some of the people had clenched hands. There were no tears, no display df emotion, but anxiety showed in their
faces for there was still hope in their hearts—that's why they were
oe
Of the 800 persons at Keith's last night about 500 were wives, _brothers, sisters— kin—of American men inin enemy prison camps. were disinterested | were eager for informaer told what he * treatment of
E. J Kind American } administrator of services lorces, as the speaker, was the first of its United States to give Po relatives in apolis and vicinity direct informa-
the interned Americans, The program was sponsored by the local Red Cross ers’ bureau. Mr. Bondy, who has just returned from Europe where he made a study of Red Cross activities, assured his anxious audience that 90 per cent
knows, because the men sign receipts when they receive the pack-
Around 25,000 Americans are now interned—18,500 in the Far East, which includes Japan, Korea and{ the ‘Philippine “islands; “ami 7200 in Eurcpe—Germany and Italy...
Visits European Camps
Although the scene constantly shifts in Italy, there are around 90 concentration camps in Italy and] Germany and 42 in the Far East. The Red Cross visits the European camps, but not those under Japanese rule. Although it is known that the Japanese are observing some of the International Red Cross
Like a Fiesta |
ALLIED HEADQUARTERS, | | tT
i
35s BES 3piqiz 153 an
--ymany,- Italy and. most. other. nations.
using. Russia _as an int deliberations now under way.
Japan. Didn't Sign
Red Cross activities for prisoners was provided for in the Geneva convention treaty of 1920 which Ger-
signed. However, Japan is not a
signatory. ; 1 Following Mr. Boady’s alk. be]
answered questions from the audi-
ence. ; Bert C. McCammon, chairman of the bureau, was master of cere-
i popular. vote fo rthe first time in
a ~=2 EWU Ire bo have frepreat reefs and concrete
floors, covered with linoleum, with simple details and modern ligh
the first two units. Skilled and unskilled clients of
cap. WHIT" oartet labor. Cleo W. Blackburn, superintendent, said cupboards, shelving and furniture would be built in the shops. Construction work is in charge of Robert L. Mason. .
BY EARL RICHERT
- Governor Schricker will not appoint a successor when his personal
legal adviser, James K. Northam, is called to duty by the navy.
(Mr.
Northam was commissioned a lieutenant, junior grade; last week). But that doesn't mean that the legal problems that come up in the governor's office will be referred to the Republican artiey
general, James K. Emmert. Rather, they will be referred to a trio of Schricker lieutenants, all of whom are experienced lawyers and good Democrats—P, 8. .C. Chairman George Beamer, Mr. Emmert's predecessor as attorney general, and Tax Board Chairman Charles Bedwell and Financial Institutions Director A. J. Stevenson, both former appellate court judges. .
No Friction
THIS SITUATION between the governor's and attorney general's office is an interesting one. It would be incorrect to say that there has been friction between the two offices bécause that just hasn't been permitted to occur. The governor goes ahead with his own business and the attorney general with his. They don’t consult each other. One of Mr. Emmert's aids says | that to the best of his knowledge the governor “has never called on Mr. Emmert for a solitary thing” sinée Mr, Emmert took office last January. What few dealings the attorney general's office has had with the governor's office have all been handled through Mr. Northam, this aid said. All this goes back to the last election when the attorney general's office, by aot of the ’41 legislaturé, was to be filled by
a “The Behricker admins" istration ‘went all out to elect Mr.
Beamer. who served as attorney |.
general during the first two years of the Schricker administration: by. appointment of the governor. But Mr. Emmert won, :
It's Good Bet
AND WHEN Mr. Emmert took office, Mr. Beamer and Mr. Northam, who was first assistant attorney general under Mr, Beamer, immediately started handling the governor's legal problems. They were paid from party funds. Mr, Northam remained as legal adviser when Mr. Beamer took the P. 8S. C. chaimanship on March 1. The viewpoint of the governor
attorney in northern Indiana who has been nominated for federal,
judge by Senator VanNuys, that |
he will take no part in next yours campaign. ; “When I go on the bench, I will be judge and that is all,” Mr. Swygert is reported to have said. The Schricker lieutenants wanted to know whether Mr, Swygert would work for Senator VanNuys’' renomination. Mr. Swygert’s nomination has been hailed by all quarters, both Republican and Democrat, as a “good one.” And Senator VanNuys is being given much praise for recommending a lawyer of high repute to the federal bench.
Public Will Get Army Ledther
WASHINGTON, Sept. 21 (U.P). -—The war production board today ordered substantial quantities of leather diverted from military, lend-lease and other supplies to civilian shoe repairing. An acute shortage in civilian stocks, WPB said, was resulting from military and lend-lease demands and reduced hide production.
ARMY INVESTIGATES
LAURINBURG-MAXTON ARMY AIR BASE, MAXTON, 8. C, Sept. 21 (U, P)~An army board of inquiry today investigated the crash of an army transport plane here yesterday in which 3 men lost their lives. The names of the victims were withheld until the next of kin have been notified, officials said. The plane, on a routine flight, was leaving the airbase field when it crashed to the ground and burned, the public relations office reported.
OFFICIAL WEATHER |
_U. 5. Weather Bureas ”
and his associates on this matter that the chief executive
All Data " LSonunl war Time Sunrise Sun LH
the record” on this situation. And it’s a good bet that things will continue this way until the end of the governor's and Mr. Emmert’s terms next year because it may well work out that they are the nominees of their respective _parties for the U. 8. senate in the
B
“| Precipitation 2¢ hrs. ending 3
Total precipitation since Ja Deficiency Pitaite Jan,
. duction training program.
“TRANSPORT CRACKUP|
The following Bd shows the temper-
'44 election.
Just a Judge
Bans un, 0. cole, Neb 1 %| pon Wades, of 904 Ar bor; Geneva Katherine LNA 18, of 35 N. wi lh "
20, of 1
803 Linden, |G Eo lall Els
Lawrence, Clovis Miller, at City. Penny, Jean Porter, at City. Pred, Mattie Achgill, at 8t. Vincent's. Marion, Vera Mae Canada, at St. Vin-
ac Lloyd, at St. Vincent's s Price, at St. ars.
223: g2lgassrresEassd
: Flanner House was founded ‘in 1898, by the late Frank W, Flanner as a nursery. The Flanner House cannery, opened’ two weeks ago; “was the | first community cannery in In diana to begin operations and is sponsored by state and city schools as part of their war pro-
FIRST LADY ARRIVES AT HONOLULU FIELD
HONOLULU, Sept. 21 (U., P).—
Mrs. Eleanor Roosevelt arrived by plane last night after a 21,000-mile
aerial tour of American military and |
naval establishments in the Pacific war gone, during which she met and talked with thousands of men in the services, She made 17 island stops exclusive of those in New Zealand and Australia, she revealed at a press conference. She was deeply tanned as a result of long rides in jeeps
: Yoo ead of Osta
~ Association Assails “Black Markets. 5]
Dr. Gall G. Jackson, Vincennes, today became president of the Indie ana Association of Osteopathic Phy. siclans and Surgeons at its annual
Claypool hotel, Before assuming his duties, Dr, Jackson delivered an address in which he: declared that “the black} market is recreating the food-borne menaces of pre-modern times."
Ticket to Trouble
“Anyone buying black market meat 1s simply his own ticket to trouble,” he sald. “Many black market animals are being slaughtered in dirty, undrained garages, deserted buildings or barns, or at the side of the road from where the meat is hauled away. Many fresh foods, especially meat, can be Infected and the infections passed on to the consumer from people who handle them, {f the handlers are diseased.” He urged doctors to warn their patients to shun the black markets as though they bore a quarantine sign.” Dr. Otterbein Dressler, professor of pathology at the Philadelphia College of Osteopathy and student of tropical diseases, warned that
bring new maladies to this country: He sald that mixed effect on the health of the nations and individuals.
and walks.
“The most favorable result,” he
STRAUSS SAYS: IT'S ONE DAY
NEARER VICTORY
meeting and war conference in the] Bi
global interminglings due to war will]
war will have al,
Former Flight Officer. Herold Marting, first Hoosier on active duty with an American Eagle Squadron. In Britain, was killed Iast night in an airplane accident at Bishopville, 8. C., his parents, Mr, and Mrs. Hugh W. Marting of Farmland were informed, He was a civilian employee of the Wright Aeronautical Corp.” with headquarters at Bualo, N.Y. He was the first Canadian flier in the present war to be_awarded the English military eross.
said, “will be a national health consclousness produced by the war and what science, spurred on by the war, is accomplishing is: almost miraculous.” He predicted that American researchers and scientists will be equal to “Invasion diseases” and hold their
The indictment revolved around the sale of stock by Mr. Wyatt and his agents in Commercial Undere writers, Inc, a firm now in the process of Jiquidation.. .. a The government charges that Mr, | Wyatt represented falsely that the * money obtained from the sale of: stock was to go into the company ° treasury while actually the stock » was owned by Mr. Wyatt and others | and the money going to them pers * sonally, Mr. Wyatt founded the underwriters firm. Four others indicted - along with Mr. Wyatt have not yet - been arrested,
Duchess Takes Boatyard Job
LONDON, Sept. 21 (U. P.)== The duchess of Norfolk, 27, and the mother of three children, has taken a part-time job as a" boa$ yard worker with promise of fulle time if she can do the WE, "
spread to a minimum,
wag“dlsclosed today.
* A GENUINELY FINE COAT!
It comes to every man in the: course of his lifetime —to many
HICKEY-FREEMAN outercoats
men it comes often—the desire
to acquire a superlatively fine coat!
‘And this ye
particula
ear—the urge is
A, strong —
Men want a fine Coat—to soothe and ‘comfort a tortured and exhausted and wearied body and
mind —
Men want a fine Coat—as a deep and satisfying protection &gainst the blasts of winter— blasts that are “sharper and deeper— what with rationed "heat" —and "tireless" wheels.
And because —The Man's Shirgmmis
"the aceredited "Home of the.
-Outercoat' —you can reasonably expect certain advantages— including * ‘The Best (coat) at YOUR
price —no matter what the price!"
range from $68-up to $150 for the
Polo Coats.
FASHION PARK presents the celebrated Pargora at $50 ... a _pedigreed Shetland at $55 .
&¥
A Kashmir and wool at $6. “as a Camel a $88.
outercoats — Superb, $68.
: MAHARAAH —Camel and Weal
GABARDINE — all-weather, a os
opcoa d $45 . . . At $50 a a Gabardines +: in the USA ede lus] 3
