Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 10 November 1943 — Page 2

~ Indiana Old-Age Pension WE (give x Card* purty Which ow Bight inthe McKinley club house, 2317 E. Michigan st., W. C. Schwartz announces. iy

WARREN GOP CLU

Et outs MESSAGE TO FOR

The Warren Township Repub- |

lican club will meet at 8 p, m. to- | ; | day at Koehiers farm, son st Home in Blaze of Glory,

and Franklin rd, when Montgomery, cl 1 Ol

RR LIAS oo PORE AN

= Ruey Lohman, Sai) WASHINGTON, Nov. 10 (U. P.) assisted by Mesdames i | Hurt, Robert R. Beaiion. To 8 {returns to the capital today with a

Carson, Marvin Schock, and Carl Wiese,

‘Mrs. Essie Perry and Mrs. E. - Glenn White will serve refresh. ments. William L. Pear, club pres- |

STORIES OF VITAMINS

WILL BE REVEALED

.A Lee Caldwell, in charge of

vitamin research at the Lilly laboratories, Stories of Famous Vitamins” at a special meeting of the Indianapolis Industrial club at 8 o'clock tonight -..4n. the War torium. - Bryan J. Moudy will direct the Indianapolis Malé Chorus, another _ feature of tlié meeting.

will speak on “Little

Memorial building audi-

ees " GROUP 3 TO PLAY CARDS. group 3

AYRES *

Armistice Dav

»

Observance

Ayres will observe Armistice Day tomer: row, November 11, of 11:00 A, M. by a two ~ minute silence. — The store auto-call bel “will ring at the begin. ning and end of the silent period.

Samuel | Rittee. will report. on.

- | Moscow conference. rn

station, was he pleasantly surprised! - There to meet him

went (0 the Union station fo depart for

Ansaldo steel works at Ce- m was a bevy of beauties of the Sub-deb federation of high school girls, each determined : were largest in Italy, Ob-| te Kiss him goodby. And Billy didn't need any coaxing. The line forined to the right. Receiving attention first is Mary Beth Underwood. The Hen Were the large Re Hoi. but | mew salior, 17, Is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Frank. Owen, 5009 E. Michigan st.

; ta . Hemin Jury that Capt. A ] . a Tor Maurice B. 2 1 int ex- : : crime. pert of the New Orleans police dethe deliberate p of getting his | partment a; = president of

EE ——————————————— - - - HINT ALBANIA CHIEF SLAIN

reported today to the OWI said that

Idhomone Kosturi, president of the |

Tomorrow's Job—

HULL CARRYING

By E. A. EVANS .- Beripps-Howard Stall Writer

| Hell Tell President What Statin Said.

| —Secretary of State Cordell Hull

personal message from Soviet Pre- domindted b { y- government. jer Jone 1 Sign; Wo Presigent The council, national organization | ‘Whether the message is only per- of manufacturers of building mahere, er - y ...\Washington.. officials . “inevitably” will ‘start ‘mammoth public works - -Roose and housing projects unless the inEm A a dustry demonstrates that private Hull's story of his long journey to enterprise and local governments Moscow and his successful confer. Can shoulder responsibilities asences with Soviet Foreign Com- Sumed by the federal government misar V, M. Molotov and British tafre the war, Mr, Whitlock said. en, : Foreign Secretary Anthony Fa “It's not enough to sit back comHis Work Wins Praise plaining about governmént interHull, expected. to arrive here py) ference and, demanding air in the afternoon, will come home jn a blaze of glory, The; president has praised his work at! Moscow. Prime Minister Winston Churchill paid tribute to him yes- | ; terday as “that gallant od eagle who flew far on'a strong wing.” | =r Auting Secrelary of State Edward] RB. Stettinius Jr. said” the naifon!

{sonal greetings or news of internatonal ‘importance’ probably will re{main -a- secret for -some- time. It may shed light on a proposed Stal-

would feel a deep debt of gratitude

toward Hull for the success of the warned today that the next six to {nine ‘months would bring the most The 72-year-old secretary of state ng

'Must Serve Public Better,’ Building Industry Is Warned

NEW. YORK, . Nov. 10.- The : butlding Industry Was WariSd today reduce. building costs, bring. home |... by Douglas Whitlock of ‘Washington, ‘I president of the Producers’ council,

that it must serve the public better after. the war or be increasingly

equipment, is meeting

own sound plans ready.” __He urged intensified efforts to

ownership within reach of millions mgqre families, and so provide hundreds of thousands of jobs for returning service men and other workers. Among “many opportunities” for lowering costs he listed: Prompt revision of local building codes which ban use of new products and improved methods; standardized material sizés;-pre-assembly of related building parfs; more eco nomical merchandising methods. Post-war homes, Mr, Whitlock predicted, will be better built, represent better values, contain new comforts and conveniences, “but still look like the sort of homes thé} public knows and wants.” He deplored . “fantastic prophecies. of

tra t home owners and dangerous to the

bureaucrats keep out of the Held of future building program. -

| WASHINGTON, Nov. 10 (U. P.. tire than can be saved by recapping —Rubber Director Bradley Dewey |

fabulous materials and magic appliances” as misleading to prospective

private business. We must get our

BOARD NAMES 6 NEW TEACHERS

Last Night. The school bbard last night ace cepted the resignations of six teache ers and appointed six additional persons to the school staffs, " Teachers who resigned are Mary E. Gard, Robert L. Campbell, Esther

__Néw_appointments went to Ancel G. Lewis, Grace T: Oberlin, Edna J. Thomas, Celia T. Hix, L. F. Eggerding and Florence Roney. 3 Leaves Granted

leave of absence, and Mary P. Beacham returned from a leave, The assignment of Mrs. Anne Morgan was changed from assistant supervisor of physical education to acting director of physical education and health,

L. Grove, Luthér Ford, LaVonne

.

Cooper, Genevieve Fischer and|must be used. ~-|Josephine West, : “A” and “B" drivers entitled to a i

Rodenbeck; Anna - M: Butler and

& Edgar Pettit,

_All_A..B Drivers. Are W arned "Bnon r

Alta |

Jésse Bruce,

Other Appointments Made! _On_Maintenance Staff |

Fay Shover, Lorraine Uhle, Cather] ine M; Bennett and Ida Mae Cooper]

pe

Josephine Jones was granted a ;

On the maintenance staff of the|

gf revo vs : Hw cdr og gs ran Fo schools; - the folk gu le Rubber Shortage Critical, : were made: oh pos

{major British political coup as result

arrived in yPuerto Rico yesterday. His return here will have its triumphant aspects.despite the lack of overt celebration. Only a few people will be allowed to greet Hull at the airport, But he is expected to hold a press conference as soon as possible after his talk with the president. ~~

Eden Also Returns

From Moscow Parley

LONDON, Nov. 10 (U, P.).—British Foreign Secretary Anthony Eden arrived back in Britain today from

tant political talks in. Cairo with Turkish Foreign Minister Numan Menemencioglu, or : Deputy. Prime - Minister Clement R. Attlee informed commons of Eden's safe return and said he would make a statement on the next sitting day, presumably on the results of the Moscow conference, Eden also may reveal anpther

of his conversations with Menemenclogulu. Speculation centered on the belief that it would. rival in ime ‘portance Portugal's recent granting of bases in the Azores. Britain has an alliance with Turkey and axis sources already have suggested that Turkey has agreed to grant air bases to the allies from which raids could be

{tires and rayon and cotton tire

the Moscow conference and impor-|

critical tire shortage of the war, {and told “A” and “B” gasoline card {holders to cut their driving to | “bare necessity,” because they would {not get any new tires “in the visible | future.” In a survey of the rubber situa | tion, Dewey’ sounded the miost serious note since thé 1942 Baruch report. ‘He said synthetic production. was going accordihg to schedule, but that facilities for producing

cords. still were far from. complete. He said military requirements. are tremendous; production of one large bomber tire alone cancels out the ability to produce up to 30 passenger car tires, ; The natural crude rubber stock pile, he said, will be lower by the end of 1944 than the Baruch committee considered an irreducible minimum, and severe restrictions will have to be imposed to bring consumption down. He listed the situation in regard to truck and bus tires as “extremely serious,” and predicted it would become worse, . He recommended the following

Truck and bus companies must

| get no new tires. -

conservation

1éss thar 801 miles of Fationed driv Di eC NE oivev. T ing per month must reduce wesw PRAYERS OF SIXTY

driving to “bare necessity” if they | wish to stay on the road. TheyH|

TO FOLLOW SOLDIERS

| Prayers for “justice and peace in the world, and for ’ | Bruising and rough driving musty poame er. of the as PS aeuan be eliminated, car pooling must be ror cecn will be made mes increased, . recapping restored “tO! ppnictice day tomorrow by 60 per-

more and more, and all possible 50 : , Bkasures o Meh as| ns at the St. Michael's chapel of

limiting speeds strictly to 35 miles| per hour—must be undertaken if! drivers wish to-continue to roll. On the brighter side, he said recaps were more - plentiful and of! better quality; the synthetic pro-| gram- is in good shape—all plants scheduled to turn out man-made’ rubber to be in operation early in 1944, - i Sales Quadrupled Dewey disclosed that 17,200,000" tires of all kinds—the equivalent of! about 12,000,000 new tires in wear value—will have been distributed by the end of this year. In 1942, only 4,700,000 tires were released. | The government's goal for 1944 civilian production "is still a mini. mum. of 30,000,000 synthetic tires. | But Dewey said there must be not

only expanded . tire-making facili~ i}

ties, but more efficient flow of ma- | terials, better management plan-

stop overloading and speeding, par-| ticularly on hot pavements, if they wish to remain in business. Every!

ning and a greater output per man- | hour on the part of labor, to reach it. ;

mounted on the Ploest! oil fields!

i

and other strategic targets in the Balkans,

! i

SEE WHAT

Painted surfaces Venetian blinds

~ SOIL-OFF

MRS. STALKER

Factory Representative on our Seventh Floor TODAY and for Two Weeks

Tioors and fireplaces

© Painted or enamiled furniture

INSTANTLY—WITHOUT WATER—.

CAN DO!

Demonstrated by

; Qt. 80c © '% Gal 1.00 ‘© Gal 135

k

Lanolin, in the flower-sprin-

pretty .in ‘your’ ‘boudoir or bathroom., .

Abundantly Tih In lanolin... boon to dry skins, Ask for Botany

led containers that look so

All Saints’ Episcopal cathedral.

. {bishop of the diocese, will celebrate Jay communion .at 10 a. m.

The Rt. Rev. R. A. Kirchhoffer,

Toys—Seventh: Floor

»

td

——

rr

for a luxury effect,

ALL-WOOL iz —X ASHAR 0UK RUGS | x12 9850 :

Rugs that look like Orientals with their intricate Persian and Chinese - designs on rich backgrounds of mellow ivory, rose, blue and Oriental pe red. Machine-made in Ametica—a genuine Jacquard Wilton construction, woven of the finest all-wool luster yarns. Sheen-washed

A durable; -three:dimensional train-that actually rls

around an oval track. Easy to assemble—no cutting, no pasting. - Over 250 pieces . including stand-up cut-outs of engineer, brakeman and freight handlers . . . freight tracks and the train itself.

L. S. AYRES & COMPANY |

J ie Wer y in ony room sie ot $1.00 por “- nn

The Tirana radio in a broadcast |

i Lionel i Fiberboard i

HS

i

7x34" 89% 367260" —119% ®r—97

stand at

attenti

at 11 a. m. Foll

at the post excl the two consol

reception eente "noon, visito

. club will mari

day’s ceremonie: and singers wil entertainment. In addition to

"parade downtov

- a Gold Star me conducted by tl at 7:45 p. m.

high school.

T

open to the publ

heroes.

The 16th an dance and pat: the American bugle corps will

in . house,

pital for

the Knights

... Hospital

..... An Armistice will be given at

patien

~. ‘Beginning af §- ‘cefemony will o

symposium on

tion? If

it is,

over and how wi

2 §

a8 8 :

: : zd

i

mon man?” wil Sears, Purdue u E. Stoner, Indis R. R. LaFollette ~ ers’ college, an

ie

will be made w

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