Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 18 November 1943 — Page 5
. ministrator Harold L. Ickes, who at the old time. __ negotiated .an agreement for the. z period of government operation with| |: 8-8 un ~~ M:- Ws - President - John Lu Lewis. |.. oor Trouble
Union Representatives in _ ~Prospects for settlement of the
United Mine Workers.
government Nov. 1 was held yes- - terday at the request of Coal Ad-
~ today but declined to discuss the __prospects of settlement. I
* Wars Stomach Acid Pains
ered n Soha was himself a victim of of after eating : Those
Gran Sombreros,”- ‘referring to «dam Hats;
of Setting U.
| Operators Meet With Coal
Wage Dispute.
. WASHINGTON, Nov. 18 (U. P). if it should pass _ protracted coal. mine wage dispute - appeared to be reviving today in re- _ newed negotiations. between the ~ bituminous operators and the! | with market time. from the committee chair man to resume for hearing the other side. It is likely -that spring will blow in and clocks will be doing business
The first bargaining conference since the mines were seized by the
_ The conferees agreed to reconvene A "AS THE leather shortage
T: . turers are casting predatory eyes ut Pigs and even sharks.
Napoleon's Waterloo? The great Napoleon who ©0 ho are distressed with
an: eh or acid pains, indigestion, gas sams hearin burning sensation, bloat And Jaga. yy 2% box of| | shark-skin is being used for
seid Should try Udga. Udga Tablets from your druggist. must convince or return bo: DOUBLE
dose and get DO YOUR MONEY BACK. nw
Spoil the Broth
must stick to the recipe,
~ By ANN STEVICK
Times Special Writer
a WASHINGTON, Nov. 18.—Doni't set your locks back now, but wheels within wheels are turning on a bill to re-establish pre-war, time for the months of November, December January and February. It is hard to see how it Will be made retroactive for November
a committee hearings listened to farm representatives who are ardent proponents. start his daily schedule at 4, now has to start at 3 The question Das subsioed, aval
S. Clocks Back || © Thirsting for Day of
Invasion.
, By ROSETTE HARGROVE “Times Special Writer LONDON, Nov. 18.— “When the - {allies land In-France, they will find A woman's legion waiting to give them every assistance in beating the
The dairy man who ‘uséd to
4.}.-gets. worse shoe .manufac-.
Experiments are under way to salvage more pigskin for shoes. Present slaughtering methods ruin pig hides for shoe leather, but.& way may. be found to get the hides off without damaging them. Unfortunately only a part of the hide makes suitable shoe leather, but that part would come in ‘handy. A little tough
facturers would like more. if it were available,
DASHING COOKS who like to add a bit here and there to recipes will have to curb their tendencies when using soya flour or grits, Department of agriculture specialists warn that you It will call for more water than seems right because soy products drink up moisture, Soy flour can't replace wheat flour entirely as many an ag- -} grieved. .cook: found out during the last war. It hasn't enough starch or gluten in it. Soy foods will brown quickly, giving a rich brown crust to baked foods or ground meats,
common enemy. This woman's _{legion runs into hundreds of thous sands—they dre the wives, mothers, sisters, sweethearts of the estimated.
many ever since 1940 or deported t {work for the axis.” > 1 This is what “Madame XxX" the
“to rejoin her husband in England,
headquarters. She preferred to remain anonymous because her family is still in France, “You must realize” she went on, “that, after more than three years of enemy occupation, every woman today is a ‘resistante’ (a “resister” Some are more active than others.
children’s shoe-tips, and manu-
Aid Allies Underground
: As a matter of fact, fatalism is
1,500,000 -men heid captive in Gers} §
wife of a. well-known young Com-| munist deputy, who recently escaped | : |
told me when I saw her at French{ ~~ . °° ial Sald a man to his friend, “You are acting like a fool” was the answer, “if that is what I am, I cannot help it. That is the way fate made me” that alibi, persistently held, there is no appeal; it is an impregnable defense mechanism, An altogeth-
The most intrepid and fearless are the women whose men have been taken from them. |
Fighting From Start
“Many have been fighting and’ outwitting the Germans right from | the beginning. Some have been imprisoned, tortured and even faced | firing squads. But throughout the country: these lonely women, representing every section of the community, have been drawn together by a spirit of comradeship, helpful-
A 5
'RATIONING DATES
ness and sympathy.” French women today are inspired by an overwhelming hatred of the invader on the one hand and, on
Ration Boards
[VeisHaR, XAVIER CUGAT, Maestro of | : Latin American Rhythms, says | Sugar "| tive pourids through Jan. 15, 1944.
~Mr.Cuget.is shown in a smart Adam $7 doiion, Styles from
$345 0 § 9 N. dion St.
; Marion county. rationing boards are closed to the public all day on
Stamp 29 in Book 4 is good for
Applications may be made for canning sugar until Feb, 29, 1944. Allotments are one pound of sugar for every our quarts of fruit canned | A}] expire Dec. 4. Brown L, becomes
FER
THIS POWERS MODEL WEARS THOM McAN UNRATIONED SHOES
RUTH RULAND, popylar John Robert Powers model, sometimes poses
in o dozen different settings during the course of a day. Ruth says:
~ “Even with rationing, | must have wardrobe variety . . . shoes that “@re sturdy enough for location trips and smart enough for town. That's
why I've been wearing Thom McAn's new unrationed shoes."
These unrationed shoes are the Gnswer 10 your footwear problem, 100. They're smartly styled— and made with Thom McAn wonder-soles, the kind thot
{ . Certificates to . purchase most heating and cooking stoves that
{be- obtained from-local- board.
‘According to authorities, the more da {vouths, 14 and 15, fashioned crude of pieces of metal which
‘|Hitzeman when he opened the ju-|
the other, of the Vichy government | and its satellites. Their only de- | sire is te see their country liberated and their men returned to them, “Resistance,”. for French women, means organizing housewives to. pro-. | test against black marketeers who prefer to sell their goods at a big profit, regardless of the fact that in so doing they deprive their compatriots of their legal rations, These even at best are often problematical,
What Resistance Means
“Resistance” means distributing and helping in the makeup of clan-' destine newspapers, acting as liaison agents bétween men who have been forced “underground” families and unions, “Resistance” also means organizing sabotage (by men as well as women) Inside industrial plants: Countless “French women; $00, | roc sia Berge ro EARL Shan. spe. thelr, NODS... broth- J
with a maximum allotment of 25 pounds per person, which includes five pounds for jellies, jams, preserves, etc. This. 25 pounds includes! the 10 pounds obtained by use of stamps 15 and 16, which have now expired. Persons must have fruit on hand before canning sugar will be given.
Meat Brown G, H, J and K are good
; Rood Sunday: M, Nov, 28; N, Dec. 5; iP, Dec. 12. All expire Jan, 1, 1944.
Canned Goods
Stamps X, ¥Y and _Z are good through Saturday. Green stamps A, 'B and C in Book 4 are good and expire Dec. 20. Jams, jellies, preserves |and fruit may also be bough? with thése stamps.
Zio BI A LT IN SN LE URE RL work against the allies, undertake] to send them “Into the wilderhess.” Findiig peasants who will take them | into their houses, securing food and | clothing and arms to enable these] "| patriots to carry out sabotage, are | just “a few of the problems they} undertake to solve,
Do Dangerous Jobs |
“The women who do the most dangerous jobs have voluntarily re-| linquished all legal status. They carry false identity papers, have no ration or clothing cards, no legal | domicile. They change their place | of abode—they have no home—as| “fand when “they sense they are be= | 1 ing tracked down.” Madame: X spoke feelingly about these countrywomen of hers because she herself had lived the life of an “illegale.” She was in the crowd of onlookers when the contents of her home were spilled out onto the side|walk and sold publicly, after the gestapo had gone through the place, slitting open armchairs, mattresses, curtain linings in their ‘search for incriminating documents. This happened after her husband had béen deported to Germany as a political prisoner, whence he escaped nine
JAILER SLUGGED BY i JUVENILE. INMATES" =="
PT. WAYNE, Ind,, Nov. 18 (U.P). Allen County Jailer Alvin -Hitzeman, 51, recovered today from sev-!
dit 18 in Book 1 good for one pair Until further notice. = No. airplane” stamp in Book 3 good for 1 pair today until further notice.
_ Fuel Oil
Period 1 coupons for the new season are good-now for 10 gallons per unit in all sones through Jan. 3, 1944, and should be .used with definite value coupons for filling tanks. i
Gasoline Stamp A-8 good for 3 gallons through Sunday. B and C stamps’ good for 2 gallons until used. Tires
Next inspection due: A’s by March 31, 1944. B's by Feb. 29, 1944; Cs, Nov. 30, and commercial vehicles, every six months or every 5000 miles, whichever is first.
Stoves
burn coal, wood, oll or gas must now
and “their f
ers deported to. Germany, there. a |
eral head an eye lacerations and bruises after he foiled an attempted: jail break by two juvenile! inimates last night.
+
they stuffed in socks and slugged
LM Pree ProTeam ARTHUR MURRAY
AN To Penn. St.
venile block to take the young prisoners to chapel services, Hitzeman explained the metal was taken from a foilet, ‘The ‘aged Jaller, dazed by their blows, fought off the attackers. The| attracted deputies to the second floor of the jail and the would-be breakers retreated to their cell, one
A COMPLETE = COMMERCIAL BANKING SERVICE The Union Trust Company cordially invites General Checking Accounts, extends Commercial Loans and
offers. complete, moder financial service to individuals and corporations.
: "Make the Union Trust Company your Bank. You will + find us well-equipped and eager to give you every
~ services td advantages we have to 8 offer you and
possible assistance. We welcome a discussion of the £
Way is Arid Copii
By DR, HARRY E, FOSDICK MANY TODAY escape a sense of personal responsibility trough
a general feeling of powerlessness. Like Gulliver in the land of the |
glants, they find their lives determined by forces so titanic that shey lapse into a mood of emotional fatalism, Fatalism is commonly presented as a dour, grim doctrine, robbing us of inner freedom, reducing us to the estate of robots, denying us initiative and creativity. \ er different outlook is suggested by Emerson: © “Henry ‘Thoreau made, last night, the fine remark that, as long as a man stands In his own way, everything seems to be in his way.”
Astrology Is Cited
Only on the basis of man's profound emotional desire to be dis_pensed from -can-the historic rise of one system of fatalism after ‘another be explained.
Astrology==its belated dévotees still among us—provided «vast “system of foreordination whose verbal left-overs linger in our vocabulary. If & man was jovial, it was because he was born under the planet Jove; if mercurial, under Mercury. Nor has theology escaped such usage, for Islam and certain forms of Christianity have
one of the most comfortable moods in which agman § can live, If he is an automatom, he is irreN sponsible, and § so has an unanswerable justification for anything he is | ~or-does. His | creed is simple “and complete: “Whatever. is, is - inevitable,
“Well,”
From
such responsibility |
| the other's chyreh, and met mid-
Ting effect on each Individual of
_he returned to his own church.
‘truth in determinism, When one
figure in New England in his day. One week-end he was to exchange pulpits with a neighboring min= ister who held a stiff £ of predestination, while on that point’ Beecher was for his.-time a liberal, On’ Sunday ‘morning both men started from home, each going to
WAY. Refuses to Preach
As they paused, the neighboring minister said, “Doctor Beecher, I wish to call to your attention that ‘before the creation of the world God arranged that you were to preach in my pulpit and I in yours on this particular Sabbath.” - “Is that so?” sald Lyman Beecher, glaring -at him. “Then 1 won't do it!" And turning his horse,
However, "there Is ‘a "kernel of
considers our absolute dependence On HHE AThtenialice of the éarth's heat and moisture the determin-
the race's biological evolution, the momentous consequences of heredity, when one confronts the fact that our initial endowments of physique, intelligence, and temperament are genetically pre-
determined, and When, added to
personal initiative and response where lies our power to indivi dualize our handing of life, the conviction that—to use Doss toivsky's :
plano,” is the beginning of hus man life's distinction and dignity. Moreover, the facts justify this conviction, The very spectacle of
one
after ‘another rising and falling CEUggeRtE alike thelr ‘emotional source and their in At the. ceriter of human - life; ls a realistic, experimental “man's capacity for personal response—whose effects in changs
validity
fact-
ing environment as well as en and in altering per sonal quality as well as putting up with it, are too evident to be
during it,
vast system of de
denied,
NEXT: Teo many people ne
only a “vocabulary of defeat”
REGISTERED
a a a rT et a EE
12184. Inch Doubles 25% Wool Blankets
In pretty plaids, in a 3%-1b, weight -and-in-the famous, wearable, Fieldcrest quality. 25% Wool, 76% cot-ton-content. With a 4-inch match- & binding of rayon satin. Blue, e, cedar. Irregulars.
pd
SEW and SAVE!
“Folders” Jaoquari- Waren Novelty Blankets
Size T2x84. Soft 10% wool, 256% % P30 50
cotton, 65% rayon, reversible Jacquard blankets with a fine rayon ‘satin binding. Wine, green, cedar.
“Fieldorest” Part: Wool Double Blankets
Beautiful block plaids in rose and ~
blue. : Siges 70x80. 5% wool, 95% . cotton content. 3% Lb. weight. 4-Inch binding of matching sateen.
98
P 3 R.
Famous “Fieldcrest”
White Sheet Blankets
55 $39 x 8] 59
All white sheet blankets to replace your sheets : this fall and winter. Choose from two good . sizes, both with whipped cord edges.
Narrow
Wale
content.
New Fall CORDUROYS
9:
Pin Wale
*1
, Mostly remnant lengths of 1 to 10 yards. In a famous quality. Navy, red, wine, blue, rose, brown, tan, black, green, pink.
S4=Inch Fall WOOLENS _
8] 69 $].97.. 82.39
alpacas, rough weaves;
New Printed Sheers, 39¢ Yd.
36 Inches wide, - Choose from a good assortment of fine: printed batistes in lovely patterns, fast colors,
~ 36-Inches wide. Navy, blue, rose
novelties.
Remnants and full bolt pieces of all wools and rayon and cotton mixtures. Each piece is marked as to wool Plain weaves, . novelties, shetlands, plaids, checks, stripes.
Novelty Dress RAYONS
3 Inches wide; remnant lengths of 1 to 10 vards’ Romaines, printed french -crepes, suitings; spuns; good patterns and colors.
suitings, coatings,
69:
New Sanforized Denims, 33¢ Yd. Wearable, washable, usable denim, sanforized to prevent excess
New Perecales, 19¢ Yd.
A good assortment of new printed percales: Fast loss; waaliable Ueable remnant lengtiu of 1 40 8 yards,
od
i
fren BD
Acetate Suede Cloth, 39¢ Yd.
45 and 50 inches wide. Wonderful fabric; remnant lengths . : 10 yesds. Gicios of a varity of pint eglots. "wl Seconds, Single Blankets NT 66x76 single blankets. ‘Beéautiful a : : LE Faeroe ao 69 © 364m Tioking, 3% y4. Musiin
“Fielderest” Sheet a
