Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 20 July 1944 — Page 21
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LY 20, 1944 [_unch 1 Will nued
Special , July 20.—Conenational school for the 1944-45 sen assured by the congress of $50,« peration, the. war n has announced. 13-44 school year § nillion children in § ughout the nation the federal-local
h program is dee under local spone boards or other ns, parent-teacher oups and other zations. burse local spone chases of food up nount determined ches served. nistration expens ate for this pro. ceed the total he local sponsors, 2 of donated serve furnished by the for the program,
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THURSDAY, JULY 20,
GERMANS FLEE
ACROSS ARNO!
Fall Back Hastily as 5th Sets Up 25-Mile Front On Bank.
ROME, July 20 (U. P.).~—Hastily retreating Germans fell back across the Arno river before Pisa today as American troops of Lt. Gen. Mark Clark’s 5th army established a 25mile front along the south bank of the river, Livorno. The Germans put up only small arms resistance and light artillery fire as they fled northward so rapidly the Americans barely were able to maintain cohtact with enemy rear guards. Despite the withdrawal across the Arno, necessitated when the Americans cleared the town of Colle Balvetti and took the hill masses overlooking the river, the Germans were expected to make a strong stand from the north bank in defense of Pisa, The drive to the Arno was accom by advances all across the allied line to the Adriatic, where armored troops of the 8th army thrust inland to establish a bridgehead across the Esino river, 10 miles northwest of newly sapired Ancona. The drive gave the 8th army troops a solid six-mile front on the south bank from the mouth of the river. The main forees which captured Ancona pushed ahead three miles against stiffening opposition
as they approached .the German
sy
OIL MAN TO SPEAK
8. C. Bartlett, manager of the! Texas Ca, will explain some of the
problems of oil production and dis- | tribution under present conditions | ae to the Exchange club in the Clay-: Fi ,pool hotel tomorrow noon.
ver « > A “ ozs,
{(REME
nine miles north of |’
1944
Victim of 2 Bus Crashes Here in Week
=
Manages fo Smile Despite His Injuries)
By VICTOR PETERSON
His chest and ribs still tightly taped because of injuries received in the bus-cattle truck crash Sunday night, John Hale, 1138 Kentucky Lave, yesterday boarded the ill-fated city bus which crashed eight minutes Igter at Kentucky ave. and Missouri st. kiling one and injuring 33. His body yet bandaged, he is back in City hospital, Room 2, Ward A-1. His condition is serious after suffering a head injury and lacerations of the face and head. - He has been given blood plasma. Now bandaged from his head to his waist, the double-crash victim still manages to smile. “It puts me in mind of walking, he said from his hospital bed today “I guess I'm getting a little afraid of riding a bus. Those are the only accidents I've ever been in. I've had all I want.” Mr. Hale had been to his doctor for treatment and was on his way home when the accident happened. He was about a third of the way back on the left side when the bus
One in a million . . . John Hale, 1138 Kentucky ave. injured Sunday in the bus-cattie truck crash, caught it again yesterday when a ctiy bus crashed at Kentucky ave. and Missouri st.
oy was thrown over two or three seats and then lost consciousness. It
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
[REVEALS BRITISH
ELECTION VIEWS
Results at U. S. Poll Won't: Alter Nation’s Policy, Britain Feels.
"By WILLIAM PHILIP SIMMS Scripps-Howard Foreign Editor LONDON, July 20.—Among Britishers who know America the conviction is growing that it isn't go | ing to make a whale of a difference! who. is elected next fall, Roosevelt or Dewey. In a recent analysis of the Ameri. | can political situation entitled! “Election Illusions,” the Economist, | one of Brendan Bracken’s publica- | tions, declared the world will be no! wiser on Nov. 8 than it is today about the ultimate course of Ameri. can policy, | There is, the periodical explains, | a real issue of foreign policy. But the November elections are not going to settle it and this would be so even if instead of Roosevelt and Dewey the contest were between an avowed internationalist like Willkie and an avowed isolationist like Col. McCormick. “The issue,” it observes, “is not the state of mind to which the
HAMILTON RAPS FDR |MRS HELEN BAILEY'S IN DENVER KEYNOTE ' was a complete surprise to me,” he| DENVER, July 20 (U. P.).—John RITES TOMORROW said. kid Baiadaiy” 1 D. M. Hamilton, former national “In the accident Sunday got Republican chairman, has chalthree broken ribs and a fracture of lerged President Roosevelt's asser- Services for Mrs. Helen M. Bailey, {the chest.” Then he grinned, “But tjon that our economic system is on| Wife of Francis P. Bailey, manager {my legs feel all right, and it's walk- a sounder, more human basis than | °f the Best Printing Co, who died ing from now on.’ - lit was at the time of his first inaug- | Tuesday at her home, 1506 N. Tli- | uration. ; | nois st., will be held at'8:30 a. m.| BOY HURT IN TRAFFIC | Hamilton made the keynote ad- tomorrow at Blackwell's funeral A 4-year-old child, Richard Kruse, dress before the Colorado State Re-| home and at Y a. m. at SS. Peter: 325 Sanders st, was in a critical publican‘ assembly in Denver yesier- and Paul cathedral. Burial will be condition -at City hospital today as day. {in Holy Cross. the result of an automobile accident] He pointed to .a department of] A ‘lifelong resident of Indian-
| in the’ 600 block on Orange st. The commerce. bulletin issued last 'Mon- | apoits, she” was the former Miss driver, Lewis Coomes, 20, of 1548 day which showed that 1,073,000 Helen M. Donnery and daughter of
E. and Patrick J. Donnery. She attended St. Patrick’s and St. John's academies. Besides her husband, she is survived by a sister, Mrs. Charles A. | Myers and a brother, Thomas Don- { nery, both of Indianapolis; 11 nieces and one nephew, and a cousin, Sister Joseph Henry of St. Mary’s-of-the-Woods.
behind a car coming from the opposite direction.
“closed their doors” in the two years | following Pearl Harbor.
Wartime Eating 2 Meta Given
THOSE WHO ARE FAMILIAR with red cabbage dishes know how good they can be with sausage. Those who are not acquainted with this| beautiful vegetable should learn how to cook it. It requires four or five times as long to cook red cabbage as the. green. And it is necessary to add an acid like vinegar to preserve or restore the beautiful red color. If an acid is not used it becames a very ! unpleasant indigo color.
= = = Toasted corn meal muffins (reSATURDAY MENUS mainder from Friday). | Breakfast Luncheon
Cottage cheese sandwiches (14 Ib.! cottage cheese, § stuffed olives, | cut, 8 slices crisp bacon, broken, | and a dash of salt, leaf lettuce, 8 slices bread). Buttered green beans (1 1b.).
Oranges and raspberries or sliced peaches (4 oranges, sectioned, and 1. pt. raspberries. Serve whole with a mound of powdered sugar). Ready-to-eat cereal (4 servings). Fried eggs (4).
Radishes (1 bunch).
Science Now Discloses Facts
About Cake
LEE
Why Risk These Skin Dangers
when my new Baby-Texture Powder gives you
that smooth “flawless
Skin specialists tell me their first warming to girls with skin trouble is “Stop using cake make-up”. Yes, that cake make-up you put on so innocently may (1) Dry the delicate surface of your skin, making it rough and flaky. (2) Cork up and help stretch the tiny pore-openings. (3) Leave germ-breeding deposits in the pore-openings to become ugly blemishes, Why take all that risk, when ‘you can have the smooth, even “flawless look” you want without danger! Why put up with troublesome “wet” powder, when Lady Esther Face Powder gives fresher, more exciting glamor at the touch of your puff.
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; Gives Skin'a Baby Teatitethat Clings 4 fons, hours—
Honeydew melon (1). Dinner
Creamed sausage meat with red! cabbage (see recipe), ! Sweet corn on the cob (8 ears). |. Escalloped tomatoes (4 tomatoes, 1 c. fresh bread crumbs, 1 med. onion, % tsp. salt, 1 thsp. sugar). Celery (1 stalk), Bread (8 slices), Sliced pineapple (1 No.2; can pineapple—43 blue pts, reserve four slices for Sunday). Nutty topped cup cakes (4). » » » SUNDAY MENUS Breakfast Cantaloupe (2 whole). Ready-to-eat cereal (4 servings). Toasted sweet rolls (8). Dinner Fried chicken (3-1b. frying chicken). Mashed potatoes (3 lbs.). Buttered peas (frozen “or home * canned). Creamed cauliflower (1 small head). Chunk pickles (chilled). Raspberry charlotte (1 pt. red raspberries). Supper Potato salad. Lettuce and tomato sandwiches 3 slices bread, 3 tomatoes, leaf lettuce). Fruit compote (4 slices pineapple left from Sat. - Add 1 banana, sliced, 13 1b. sweet cherries, pitted, 1 orange sectioned and - diced. Sweeten if desired). Nutty topped cakes (remainder from Sat.).
Saturday:
Make- Up:
” o ” Creamed Sausage Meat With Red Cabbage: 1 Ib. sausage meat, 2 thsps. chopped onion, 2 tbsps. flour, salt to taste, 1%¢ c. milk, 1 small head red cabbage, shredded, !': c. water, % tsp. salt, % tsp. sugar, 2 tsps.vinegar, 1 tsp. caraway seed. Slowly brown the sausage meat and onion in a skillet over slow heat for* 20 mins. stirring occasionally. PR Pour off the grease during the cook- SERRE ing, finally leaving only that which clings to the meat. Blend in the flour and salt and add milk gradually; cook until mixture boils and thickens. Pour this hot - mixture over the cabbage, which has ‘been covered and cooked with the re‘maining ingredients for 30 mins. or until tender. Four servings.
look"— without danger
patent. You see, Lady Esther Face Powder isn't just mixed, just sifted. It's blown with the tremendous force and speed of hurricanes. That creates what I call the “Baby-Téxture” of my powder. Lady Esther Powder is so smooth and fine it leaves your skin with a flattering film of beauty, hiding those little lines and blemishes, giving a youthful flawless-looking finish iat clings 4 long hours!
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What is your experience with cake naso.up? Writé me, as W. 65th » Chicago, HI.
Ne
Ra Easy to Make " With DUFF'S
PERFECT . .. Sued with a crisp salad and iced tea
Friday Store Hours: M5AMLS5:I5P.M.;
9:30 A.M. "til 1 P.M.
American people will give expression | on Nov. 7, but the state of ming
[that they will induce in their con-
‘gressional. representatives through ithe long years that will follow, “It has bégun to ‘dawn on many {that the ‘Democratic party more and more has tended to become a oneman show without whom the party reould not win. The inevitable corol-« lary therefore is that4t is less a’ matter of platforms than of per=
concerned and that the real decision regarding the road America will take will come later.” Of course, says the Economist, “It will be a great advantage to have! a sincere internationalist in the White House but not so great as to be decisive. “Both candidates agreed on the!
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sonalities so far as November is” are bound to influence American and worth fighting for.
| peace which follows.
3
SEES STRO) | EFFORT BY WS
{Keemiee Doubts That Peae Move Will Follow
Tojo Ouster.
By LOUIS F. KEEMLE United Press Foreign Editor
.| The main purpose of the governmental upheaval in Japan ‘is evidently to strengthen the country’s ability to carry on a war which has been going very badly, and ‘not to prepare the ground for strrender. The resignation of the Tojo cabinet came as a direct result of the fall of Saipan, the greatest strategic blow Japan has suffered] The significance of that defeat may not be fully appreciated by the Japanese masses, but that and other setbacks in the Pacific and Southeastern Asia must have made them aware of an unfavorable outlook. More important, there is a lage element of the educated classes in Japan which is not imbued with the ultra-nationalist spirit of Tojo's militarist followers. This section of the population, influential in economic and social life, cannot be completely deluded nor can it be ignored by those in power without Governor Kerr of Oklahoma, keynote speaker at the Democratic |aTave internal risks. convention, tells delegates that the nation “hardened under Harding, | cooled under Coolidge and hungered under Hoover,” He said the war | is being won by “tired old men.”
Government Apologizes
Consequently, the official statement on the fall of the Tojo cabinet said in apology that the govnecessity for a League of Nations of ler believe that even Roosévelt could | ernment had done its best in prosesome sort, but it was the mood of, take the country, for example, into Suite, the war but had nov proved a post-war organization pledged to | powerful enough and was being rethe counity after the Sections (hat | preserve. the status quo if necessary! | moved in favor of a stronger .one. settled the policy-to be pursued.” I by the use of force unless it was[" “At this critical and decisive time Two factors it is recognized here convinced that the peace was just in the war,’ the Domei News agency’s announcement said, “it (the public opinion tremendously, per- | Another American development government) acknowledges the imhaps decisively, regardless of the which British opinion generally is| portance of making way for a more outcome of the electoins this au- beginning to recognize is that while | powerful cabinet in order to renew tumn. | President Roosevelt may be elected | the public spirit and to strive toOne is the progress and outcome he may have a Republican con- | ward an all-out effort for the of the war. | gress. Many therefore who other- | prosecution of the war.” The other is the nature of the wise want Roosevelt would prefer; The reference to “public spirit” Dewey rather than have divided and “all-out effort” seems to be the Few informed observers any long-| authority "in Washington. ve of the announcement.
