Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 8 December 1943 — Page 6

: Sndisnagalls, | , We Tu Gs - Hear Johnston Give : _ Peace Formula.

: {pore FILES PROTEST] (Continued From Page One) | OF ROUNDUP OF JEWS unas the there must be competition in

_ BERN, Dec. § (U.'P.).—Pope Pius Se must understand that it must become more free; democratic and socially minded and must clean its owri house; that there must be’ no restrictions on individual initia tive. - Agriculture must anderstaid] that it must produce more efliciently than before, that the docakan piace Tuesday. I Bind the trine of scarcity is the doctrine of! {official move to oppose racial laws |". ern must understand since they were laid down in Italy, | that we don't create wealth by tak-| although ‘the Vatican organ, Os- ing -doliar from someone and| | |servatore . Romano, has. published: ioe jt t5 someone else, laws must; song protests. be revised to stimulate Investment: boners, of risk capital in order .to create] more jobs: for men.

“What we want,” he said, “is a| amount of government| Africa, He was a member of 2

| chemical battalion. {enterprise consistent with the eco-| He entered the army 'in De- |

‘1 | nomic complications of the world in| cember, 1942, and received train- | |nomie we ape ing Camp Pritchard, N. C, and

“If these things can be done, we| | Ft. Bragg, N. C, before going. | will be on the threshold of America’s overseas. He attended Manual | greatest development and we will see| high school and was employed by | things that will far exceed anything | the Railway Express Co. Also surwe have seen in the past.” viving is. a brother, Ralph BaechNew State President er, 602 Cottage ave. Dean H. Mitchell, Hammond, Bin 8 president of the Northern Indiana Wounded Public Service Co., became president) pyr GEORGE H. HEATHERof the state chamber of commerce! yv fgrmer today, succeeding Louis Ruthenburg, | PY o 3 Zyoamors sh. Evansville manufacturer, president | the - Mediterranean thedter, but & { for the past two years, Mr. A ltaney letter received ; : was frst vice president f of the hire from PVE i |“"Mr. Mitchell also is head of the bo%therty in | Indiana Electric association and a 1.4 he had past Jtalins of the Indiana Gas been released Mr. Ruthenburg, in the presi- oe the hosdent's report, told chamber mem- pus. rata. {bers that “we must understand one 0) ® B © | another's problems, be more toler- » 0 gy hers fant. and. unselfish. and. work. to, He hin r {gether more closely than ever ast > WILo Tas we make our personal contributions, Since - dec —first, toward winning the war and ceived word of Tl to lh ti «| his wounds re- eatherly then toward preserving from war's y . | hideous "dislocations such assets as ceived in Italy on Oct 11.. He was | wi by winnin the ace.” | released from the hospital on Oct. » may y n J | 17. - He is still in Italy, and has | | been overseas since November,

1942.

WNUTT SEES MORE Pvt. Heatherly, 22, formerly USE OF MANPOWER worked here for the Barrett Bot-

tling Co. and United Cab. He | lived with his grandmother at the . WASHIN 8. (U.P). —| {The nati ga we ar its Sycamore st, address. {manpower more efficiently: through |

» » . of techniques which are | . .SIXTEEN-INDIANA men were "the labor of tens of thou:

saving” among 488soldiers listed today as sands of workers through the coun- |

wounded in- action. Tiry, War Manpower Commissioner ~~ S: Sgt. Kenneth L. Edwards, Paul V. McNutt said today. husband of Mrs, Wanda L. EdIn a feport on the manpower wards, New Albany, was wounded situation as of Dec. 1, MeNutt de-| in the European area. scribed methods used effectively to| Those wounded in the Mediter{bring the total labor force to about ranean area include: Pvts. Donald 51,500,000 and unemployment Yolls Hartins, son of Mrs, Bonnie down to 700,000. =: Among the techniques he listed are: . Employment Cellings—MoNutt said ceilings have been established in| many areas as a means of reducing | anticipated labor requirements. ‘Ceil- | 501 of - Mrs. Jessie Smith, Terre ings for west coast shipyards, he| Haute: Pfcs. Raymond H. Baurle, said, reduced labor requirements by | son of Mrs. Annie Baurle, Sey97.000. | moiir; Harold R. Brown, brother The 48-Hour Week—A substantial of Mrs. Charlotte Noble, Greenreduction in labor requirements| castié; Randall O. Fair, husband seems to have resulted in many| ©f Mrs. Connie E. Fair, Oakland communities. In Akron, for exam-| City: Arthur P. Howson, son of ple, an estimated 10,000 workers/ Mrs. Etta L. Tarter, Linden; were saved and in Detroit from] Richard R. Van Dalsen, son of 12.000 to 20.000. Mrs. Della Vaf Dalsen, address __Industry-Wide Stabilization Pro- | not given, and Curtis J. Wray, grams—One such program, intro- | son of Mrs. Marjorie Wray, duced for noriferrous mines in Sep- | Brihghust; Sek: Lord E Culdtember, 1942, during a critical] Well, son of Mrs. Minnie - sfiortage of laboF, has worked so| Well. New Castle; Sgt. Louis D. nr gases becuse 4 the ni well that a declining trend of em-| Ball, son of Mrs, Reatha B. Ball, :| yore ghsent from school. ployment has been reversed and| Akron; T. 5th Or. Louls J. |emgug4e Dollens, Lawrence Aion nonferrous metals are now plentiful| Mathews, son of Mrs. Opal |peqith officer, estimated that 1000 enough to permit stockpiling. Mathews, Vincennes, and Opl. |of the 12500 residents of Bedford: reins ilimrmesre— Norbert A: Hess, son of Mrs. Mary | were {ll. U. 8. BOMBERS ARE BEST E. Hess, Decatur. Dr. Herman G. Morgan, secretary "WASHINGTON, Dec. 8 (U.P.).— s wm of the Indianapolis board of health, house The United States has the best | Mi . stated that the outbreak could not bombers in the world and soon will| - ising {be compared yet with the flu epl-| have the most potent fighter fleet, COXSWAIN VELTON LEE DE | [demic of 1918 However, it is pro-| {Robert A. Lovett, ‘assistant secre-| ARMOND, husband of Mrs. Ida ducing a strain on the doctors and Jr of ar of war for air, r air, said id today. | De Armond, 1440 N. Illinois st, |nurses, he said: TT He urged persons Naving colds or | influenza to go to bed, and .those | with high temperatures should eat their meals in bed if possible to | avoid becoming chilled, he advised.

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" 0f Couple on Charge of Baby Death.

Petitions demanding the release

charged with murder. in connection with the death of their newly-born

The petitions demand “that George Lowe Jr. 18, and Betty Jean Long, IR, be permitted to post bonds for their release pending trial of the case which may not be held for several months. The petition in behalf of the youth, filed by David Lewis and Henry O. Goett, attorneys, offered to show that the boy is not guilty f murder as charged and that the presumption that he might be guilty is not sufficient to hold him in all without : the Op Rey to make bond.. a re

Indicted 2 Weeks Ago *

The petition for the young mother, filed by Ira Holmes, attorney,| stated that evidence will {she is not guilty" of any charged in thé recent grand jury| {indictment ; | If found guilty of the charge, | {both could face life imprisonnient| or even the electric chair. They were indicted two weeks ago on evidence that the Lowe boy threw the baby into White river an| hour or so after birth had taken | place in the rear seat of the youth's| automobile.

FLU REPORTED ow INCREASE IN STATE

‘(Continued From Page One)

increased slightly yesterday which may indicate that the peak .has been reached. St. Joan of Arc Catholic school, which closed Monday afternoon, will reopen tomorrow. At Knightsville Roy Brann, prin-| cipal, closed the schools yesterday because of low pupil attendance but | said they probably would reopen in a few days. Indiana university reported 30 influenza cases at the infirmary | ‘and about 25 per cent of Bloomington's public school children =) Schools and war plants in Ft.| Wayne were struck by heavier senteeism In Bedford two business places

Pvt. George H

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Hartins, Westphalia; Joseph L. Levi, son of Mrs, Zelma-E. Levi, Osgood; William KH. Marti, son of Mrs. Sylvia Marti, Garrett; Maxel Shields, son of Everett Shields, Bloomfield, and Donald G. Smith,

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"the Dardanelles. The ‘bulk of the German rein-|

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Petitions Claim nocence, Sv discussed’

Dardanelles ‘as a supply route for

from jail of the teen age couple|Russia.

special groups, be ihey oil producers or coal miners or rails 0 can get special

“No group has a right to hold a v political pistol at the head of the

using a political pistol. The governthent must say to any such they | FOP: ‘Lay that pistol down.'"

Some sources expected ~Turkey'simake organized appeals

presenting the - > with a fait accompli. Gein Nervous Apparently . anticipating some such move, Germany- was reported rushing land and air reinforcements into southeastern Bulgaria, espe-

reports reaching Cairo. : Large detachments of elite guard forces also were reported massing at Salonika and gradually embarking for the island of Lemnos, which commands the Aegean ‘entrance to

forcements on the Turkish frontier,

show that | most of which were motorized In-|reckless as a proposal for a concrime | fantry, ‘were sald to be concentrat-|trolled fipod or a controlled forest

ling in the triangle formed by the;

| Black sea port of Burgas, the fron-

tier town of Rakovski on the main | | Sofia~Istanbul railroad, and the in-| iland - town "of Plovdiy. The Gerinans also were rushing to | completion - air ‘bases in an Inner | triangle based on - Plovidiv, Stara | Zagora and Malko Tarnovo on the frontier, it was said. «+ Bulgarisns Restive The same informants aiso oil that German uneasiness over the at{titude of the great mass of ‘Bulgars lians has been mounting steadily |since the death of King Boris be-

|cause of that country’s traditional sympathy for Russia. An incipient]:

| liberation ‘movement in Bulgarig was reported to have, contacted the new partisin- government of Dr. Ivan | Ribar mm Jugoslavia. = In a further effort to disturb the Balkans, the allies were believed | circulating through neutral chan-| nels. the specific terms under whice they will - accept "Germany's surrender,’

'HALLECK SUCCEEDS DITTER AS CHAIRMAN.

WASHINGTON, Dec. 8 (U. P)—| Rep. ‘Charles A. Halleck (R. Ind) at a party caucus today was elected chairman of the Republican congressional campaign committee, suc- | ceeding the late Rep. J. Wiliam: | Ditter (R: Pa). i House Republican Leader, Joseph W. Martin Jr. of Massachusetts said Dr.| Halleck was elected “unanimously by acclamation.” Halleck told ‘reporters that the committee would be “strong and

|nggressive in campaigns over the

[Some for election of a Republican] » He said that Republican control of the next Howe “now 381 appears inevitable.”

| TURKEY EXPECTED IN! WAR IN 4 MONTHS,

(Continued From Page One)

ing out on Greece and Bulgaria are comparatively strong. According to military .opinion, if she could not hold her own there

body.

-|rise in prices, Byrnes said:

in. the last war in keeping down

cost of living has increased only | 126 _per cent. But he termed the

cause fhe Amerivan People ADDar=?

declaration of war, if and when it{will suffer undue a wil comes, would be

baby, have been filed in criminal taneously with military action, thus pendents- of servicemen. In hort, court. Byrnes

“Killing subsidies will. hurt esveryIt will ultimately increase the cost of everything we buy. When -we cash our victory bonds we will find that the dollars will buy

only a part of what they would

have bought at the time of our in-| the! | no longer sufficient to protect our families.” |

5 DAYS LEFT

Hits ‘Reckless’ Talk

Noting some congressional argu-| ments that a ban on subsidies could | z

be “accompanied by. a “controlled” Fr that promised:

Christmas gift

“Some talk of controlled infla- | tion. Such talk” is as criminally

fire or a; controlled epidemic of) smallpox.” Thus far in this war, he said, the! : nation has done a better job. than | . costs despite the “failure to Rid 2 adequate taxes.”

While the national income bas| doubled since 1939, he declared, the

picture taken.

No appointment needed * proofs shown. 3 Sepia Vigneites #4 Multifote Btedie

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prospect of a stable and prosperous | America “far from bright stnply be-

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