Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 22 November 1943 — Page 4
Betting a Roosevelt. Churchill con- + ference with Chiang for a place and {time different from any meet with | Stalin would be out of courtesy to | the Russian leader. Stalin might | prefer to avoid a full dress conference with representatives of the three nations now fighting Japan, | with whom the Soviet Union is in a state of more or less precarious !peace. No one here wants to do {anything that would disturb Jap-
| anese-Russian relations at } this ine : “thre 3
The expected Rosstvelt- Churehi}l- | | Staiin meeting would be of greater.
NOTICE LOW RATES EXTENDED to NOV. 27
To Accommodate Those Who Could Not Be Interviewed Last Week
“It was impossible for us to see ali of the whe - wanted to enroll “last week. ¢refore the introductory new studio dance rates hate been extended until Saturday, November 27th, Please avoid telephoning.’
“|deal with development of the Anglo-
military than political significance.
{It ‘was remarked here earlier in the denounced foreign. allegations that |
month that several of the highest | ranking U. 8: army and navy offi- | cers ‘were not in their accustomed places. The Vichy radio soon afterward reported them to be en route to staff meetings.
For Combined Operations
There were intimations at last August's Quebec conference that Russian and Anglo-American military staffs probably would not be | ready to talk until the three nations | were ready for combined operations of some kind. It is assumed, therefore, that any conference now would
American assault on ‘the western |
Making Confidential Investigation,
(Continued Prom Page One)
tee over the week-end but had: declined “because he said he had several little matters he wanted to clear up.” | “He did not tell me where he was going, but® that was his custom,” Sheppard said. “We had an under-
n/out his own way and then report back. He always got results that way.” He sald Lt. Cmdr. J. J, Mansure; who piloted the ship in which ‘he| rami Ditter- met Heath, wi¥ dnd oe
blows by the Red army on the east-|® “Pool of pilots” made available
standing that he was to work things |
Robert iT two years for “Food fo This means to Marion county! Victory.”
Rep. Steagall, sl of
Subsidy Program, Dead at 70
(Continued From Page One) ;
lern front will be sypported by the !0 the committee by the navy for | {statement that “Henry Steagall was, lation of sound economic laws, to
use on official business. Sheppard, jm > forces’ of “the Alien onthe said he “had flown twice with. -Map~
sure, Another article in the magazine " Ditter Wiis" SAAD of the Ree Russia planned to establish a hege- publican congressional campaign mony im or bolshevise Europe ad |COMmmittee which was planning the asserted that the peoples of oc- [um of the G. O. P. to power in ied countries should have the . final word in deciding their post-| Ditter, who lived at Ambler, Pa,
war governments. The magazine first was elected to congress fn>1932+
added it was sufficiently clear that uy eelioted to Suscesding terms, the peoples of the enslaved countries or as ried and had two chilwould not permit a return to power| Tn , a as executive of the regimes and policies which Oficer of the ow Grove, Pa, opened the gates to Nazi aggression naval air training station, and had and’ conquest, and emphasized that served in the naval reserve for 15 the Anglo-Soviet-American pledge Jones. He lived at Prospect Park, of co-eperation constituted a pledge Fought Subsidies -
of liberation and regeneration for sonqteréd | peoples. Ditter’s fatest important floor ap“te pearance was about & week ago
{when he indulged in. a bitter casti-
{gation of Rep. Wright -Patman (D.
one of ‘the best.and finest men 1 everjabandon production of things the: knew,” adding that the “country|worid ueeds, which we are best suffered a great loss. in his passing.” [adapted to produce, , and have been Steagall, author and floor man-|compelled ‘to return to primitive
ager of legislation to han food sub-|methods and to produce our own . . {point ‘on the 'Rome-Florence rail-
sidies after Jan. 1, ranked seventh|food and live at home. in the house in point of service,| “What good is a food subsidy gohaving won election to 15 consecu-{ing to do the farmers of Sand tive terms starting in 1914. mountain in. Alabama? We are going tc be taxed again to pay the Critic of OPA bill but we Wil nes be allied to As chairman of one of the most| participate In the benefits.” powerful committees in the house, Steagall ied in preparing and ob-
ov ane or mer wean TINY GILBERTS HAVE | the reconstruction finance corpora- |: BIG 1 ACTIC AL V ALUE
tion and the commodity credit ear- - {Continued From Page One)
poration, | He was one of ¢he house's most outspoken critics of - the. office of |
price administration when it “was. {all in order to fortify the island. nl lof Canadians,
headed by Leoni Henderson -ard| Complete secrecy, {charged neatedly and “often that!
_|and sinking a 100-foot has | bar
Apparently Prepare. To Abandon Two Bases =~ -. On Rome Road. (Continued From Page One) of bombs, severely damaged an 18acre area, knocking out quays,
lin the bor, . :
Several enemy landing craft were damaged at the harbor, an impor
| tant communication point for the
Germans. on the western Italian
anti-aircraft barrage.
“I saw our bombs hit smack in a large storage and ammunition dump
Names, smoke and debris,” Staff Sgt.
& bombardier,.said. "New Targets Bomhed <_
Marauders atfacked two new targets. They were Chuisi, midway
road, and Feno, on the east coast railroad. One enemy plane was shot down over Chuisi, while rail and highway bridges were damaged at ‘Fano, where one of 13 enemy planes encountered was damaged.
nts at Gaeta, amy front,
above - the 5th and fighter planes
ranged over Jugoslav and Albanian
targets. Rail" and highway points north of the battle area were attacked.
-1 Among - troops who recently have =]
arrived in-Italy was a large number including ‘men from - lan parts of Canada. There also were
coast. The bombers met a heavy |
whole ‘place ‘blew up “In a ‘mass of
Arthur Wallerstedt of Chicaga,. au,
Mitchells raided gun emplace- .
WLR RS WW TN ——————————————— A » ! SSC
YOL |
@ If your 1
advantage balance “ARSENAL! ly payment as well as which may you to co your home .~glad-to giv formation obligation. or phone F
3 Bay You Ce B
‘| shores of - Europe, “and perhaps a pincers movement into the Balkans. From the conference presumably | 10 FREE PRESS
will .come the long-discounted an-
To on the current subsidy issue. | Call in person at the studio . . , any time until 10 p. m, to complete arrangements.
ARTHUR MURRAY DANCE STUDIOS
38%; N. Pennsylvania St. FR. 2565
Sat tm hos —
nouncement- that Gen. George C. Marshall will command AngloAmerican forces in .the European theater. There have been reports ‘|that Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower, present commander, would come to} ~“the United States to- sit-in -as chief} -
ipa LI GR I SR
Lor ukin, Due hd Ine rorthernmest nurses from one Canadian hospital 5 Pa | Ditter was one of the leaders of the Henderson had circumvented ‘the! [Wide with a deep lagoon ih he unit. fight against subsidies. ’ law. which Steagall himself had, ‘entrances. There are two main ‘As chairman _of the Republican rate elongated islands at the base’ of its INDI ANA DRAFT CALL campaign committee, Ditter did, In Lis last house speech, “teagall, ‘triangular formation with ihe reef i {most of the behind-the-scenes po- | denounced the Rpartaony con- forming the orther two sides. In . - . litical work for the Republicans in | tention that prohibition of food | 1937 Makin had a population of FOR JANUARY DROPS United Press President the house. He was certain that the subsidies. would produce inflation. 1600, Republicans would regain control of (He said the administration had The Gilberts are 2400 miles southsl (Continued: From Page One) Addresses Club at the ‘house in next year’s elections! rused the same argument in oo of - Hawaii; 1689" ‘mites un | Go Cleveland. in_ which case he would have be- Unsuccessful attempts to block 108-! northeast of New Guinea. and 270/ OU Of defense plants all men __|come one of the top-ranking mem- islation it did not want. miles south of ~ Japan's: “Murshall| between 18-and 25 years of ge res _ CLEVELAND, O., Nov. 24 (U. P.) A. 1 ire ropsiions.. sou ‘We Have Not Lost’ Soande, Whieno are 32 islands and gardless of skills, <= Hugh Raillie, President of the aGlive pail #8 u As member.| “Yet.” Steagall told his colleagues, aa = ered - over nearly 809) Col, HitcHeoek sald there was Bo United Press last week warned that “the republi¢ still lives, thank God, | OWhed ‘by the ‘British. th : u way of predicting how many men SOveIRIDL wpa ‘Routine Flight’ and we have not lost the war" oon or o oo” . eo the draft boards would get for the nterchange of news necessitated as - y r > = A teMpOTary war measure must be Siegen army filers Were riding in n eating pre the same day they attacked Pedr! mime forces by reclassifying the eliminated immediately after the |} (M"EPOT a ine fg selfish Teasons. he added: Harbor. | He said that no orders had been war if free international dissemin- 4 “Farmers have been forced, in vio | . {issued yet as to what would be done ation of news is to continue. Fear Tamaqus SW. s1ploded ha | SOVIET MAGAZINE |after the reclassification of this Baillie, in an addess before the = group. He added there were pose ! Advertsing Cub “ot Givin 1170 [2 TAGE in» due cubed ana red near Mian, RAPS JAP MORALE Soi ha er EA eo inted out that great ress had i : . sould. be reclassified -or- that men pois made i ol wd ot | - Army authorities said they were: 2 © Parachutes to Safety. MOSCOW, Nov, 22 (U. P);—The eon 4 be called by age sroups, le to determine whether the : : ta oo . authoritative publication War and competitive “news. gathering . and, ab In the other accident, Bernice ‘two "survivors had parachuted ; or | ’ ' {the Working Class said today in an or how the ee Aaa Be) had been thrown clear when the pusiliary. ploy hes. Of the wanes 4 \unusually-blunt appraisat of Ja- GRAND JURY T0 SIFT SEACH NHS RR BING: 150 WH Ohi whe smloetmir a o"sitety heh 14a’ Erol Ra Sb Tet 7 FOR THREAT CHARGE" thie - P'Wis organized, ~~~ [hames--of the dewd- :And- injure he army plane she was oi ese fighting spirit hav begun to!" -HRBLRL- WHA . “Before the United Press was were withheld pending notification from Pittsburgh to Middletown, Pa.| {lag i Vio fear of heavy ew DETROIT, ‘Nov. 22 (U. P.).— formed,” Baillie said, “news of the Erg. oher ali. seeiuiater tise She landed uninjured near Frank- A a nce among NIP- Howard E. Rathbun, 50, an auto. +] Bellefonte; Tt ed Pe Fo, Bim 10 eR pm on od olled by ‘a few big European ted plane c earby " To d ed afte + | tederal grand jury today for: als 1a Some of them were sub- | (parachuted to safety over, Cambriai might naval officers were among ko Tojo had stat r a recent ol “outright by their govern- |county and a woman flier bailed! the 17 Americans killed in the craski| cabinet meeting that “every day | legetily threatening the life of Presimients, 50 -that they would report |°Ut Safely from a. single-engined of 4 U. 8. navy transport plane dur~| DFifgs- gloomy proof -that -America (dent: Roosevelt... ‘only when those governments ‘de. |*MY Plane when it was buffeted by|ing a dense fog near Rio de Janeiro, and England are making every ef-| U. 8. Commissioner J. Stanley sited. Some enjo 16 in high winds over Center county. |5 navy announcement disclosed to-|fort to counterattack and crush Hurd fixed bond at $10,000. The yed preférence in| p complaint was made to federal getting official news and transmit. | rst Lt. Donald Crist, pilot of day, Japan in the shortest time, despite SE by wre ous aro a (the Flying Fortress on a routine] The shi p, with 18 persons aboard |heavy sacrifices.” Batholith a policeman neigh(flight out of Dayton, O. said he and reportedly carrying important vermisse sim | bor of Rathbun. = a ; * Free Interchange (decided to abandon the plane after documents and correspondence for] CURLEY. FACES NEW CHARGE | 4 DUFF COOP COOPE R GIVEN POST “The American press and people lone motor failed, a second was the U. S. embassy at Rio de Janeiro, BOSTON, Nov. 22 (U, P).=— | Nad to get most of thet o about to go out and it appeared im- crashed into a mountain Saturday move to re-indict U. S. Rep. fava LONDON, Nov. 22 (U. P).—Alget most of their world news possible to land the craft, afternoon when only five minutes|M. Curley (D. Mass.) in connection | fred Duft Cooper, chancellor of the from those foreign agencies. Also, | After the crew jumped, from flying time from its destination.|with the Engineers Group, Inc.'s al-| duchy of Lancaster, has been ap. the world outside got its story of [about 6000 feet, Crist set the auto-|The other victim was a Brazilian leged mail fraud was indicated to-| | pointed the British government's the United States through those Matic pilot for a southwesterly di-|civilian. day when subpenas were served on | representative in the United KingBu h . {rection und dropped from the ship.| The American victims—16 service-i witnesses who appeared before the {dom to the French committee of same European channels. |The Fortress apparently cruised 'men and one civilian-—were buried|federal grand jury which originally national liberation, it was an“Then the United Press was {over parts of three states before it "with full military honors yesterday. | indicted Curley. nounced today. . founded upon the prinicple of free S000 11 TE interchange of news among nations, = | to which basic policy it has adhered
ever since. From the day of its organization, the United Press was in |! competition with the world-wide system on interlocking news monop- | olies. In pursuit of news gathered! independently by its own corre-| [spondents, the United Press broke down the old restrictions wherever it encountered them.” Baillie pointed to the achievement of the United Press in becoming the greatest. world-wide distributor of | news today as striking testimony to 2 the esteem in which that organiza- | | tion's free and independent meth- = ods of news gathering are held ally over the world.
I. U. SOCIETY ELECTS WILLKIE AS MEMBER
© Times Special ; BLOOMINGTON, Ind. Nov. pa
Wendell L. Willkie has been made a member of Phi Beta Kappa, hon- |
LEME AEE LAR
That isn’t the whole story, however. Transforming these lifeless ribbons of concrete and macadam into live, active arteries of public transportation has been the accomplishment of the Indiana Public Service Commission. They've labored hard and long to give our State a transportation system that compares favorably with any other in the country.
All of us who live and work and pay taxes in Indiana-can take pride in our share in this Righ-
way system. orary scholastic society, through As fellow citizens, the Grey- election by the Indiana university!
hound Lines have made a very chapter, Dr. Hal Weatherwax, chap- | E = large contribution in the form of ter president, announced today. license, fuel and operating taxes pe election he Mr. Willie_st, — but we feel that our greatest tie Chapters Jal mucling was tes." service is in putting the high- The initiation ceremony wil be arways to work for the benefit of all ranged - later. who must travel, making near Mr. Willkie obtained his A. B. neighbors and good neighbors of
and LL.B. degrees at I. U. and! received an honorary degree of doc- | all the communities we serve throughout the State. - . gs
A strange place it would be—this State of ours — if our splendid 77,951-mile network of highways suddenly ceased to exist.
A great many communities would be isolated. Others would find it infinitely more difficult to - carry on even the most ordinary daily activities — with no trucks on the move, no cars or buses" taking workers to war plants and farms, soldiers to camp and home on furlough, business travelers to nearby communities, children to school.
We in Indiana are apt to take for granted the convenience of our Excellent roads—but these highdidn’t just grow. Building maintaining them is a tre-. mendous job and for achieving this successfully we can thank past and present administrations
and particularly the Indiana State Highway Commission.
INVEST Re ilk i 4 } SalieDyed Co ney
5.) i ” LOINOSRORTIRHIS RIT LONIRIRRNERORERTRRINNiN
tor of laws in 1038.
*
X ¥
- =
Will you give 45 minutes % save a fighter's lite ?
About 45 minutes after you walk into Red Cross Blood Donor head"quarters, you walk out with a glow of pride that won't ever come off ... | for you've given & pint of blood that may save an American fighter's life ~ongome far battlefield. It means so much—yet it's surprisingly easy to do. - Write or phone your nearest Red Cross headquarters for an appointment.
me » >Z -f = nz kJ -f
xX == or =
Warm investments you'l NEVER Foret! Beautiful sablesdyed: ‘coney fur coats and cover for a cold, cold winter! Come in and try one on! You'll ; ing’ silken soft skins with their distinctive markings. Well , with superbly whe and becoming lines. Bell s eev ; deep, easy-to-slip-inte—— a Oles. Sizes as ‘Women and Misses in the group.
—Fur Coat Department,
XI>
zzz
il —
-f o>»
wo
a
oo In
z
oo O00» 0 ~<» >m =z @
GREYHOUND TERMINAL °
: di Terminal Bldg. SERVICE®
#501
SERVICE 60,
