Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 21 November 1944 — Page 7
. ,
"has collected in Indianapolis over a |
- the U, 8. senate mounted to 2011
B. 1'S TURKEY DINNER STOLEN
Invitation Fowl Is Taken From Pen.
On the eve of its execution. a 14-| pound turkey was stlen last’ night | from the garage of Mr, and Mrs. Joseph Marker, where it had been “fattening up” since Saturday. " And with the disappearance of the turkey, two prospective Thanksgiving dinner plates for soldiers, stacked with- baked turkey and dressing went glimmering. “I worked so hard for that turkey,” Mrs, Marker said, “and my husband was going to kill it tonight, It was just as fat and nice at is could be” Earned Turkey Monéy Mrs. Marker paid $630 for the hen at a farm near Speedway and earned the money by doing interior painting at a North Side home last week, “We had planned to entertain two soldiers, my sister-in-law, her son and his girl friend Thursday,” the 48-year-old mother said, “We called the U, 8. O. to ‘invite the soldiers but I had to call them back and tell them to cancel the invitation this morning.” Both the Markers have been {li recently, Mr, Marker fell and broke a rib about nine weeks ago and has just returned to work at the Allison division of General Motors. Mrs. Marker suffered a broken leg shortly after her husband's injury.
Would Honor Son
The Markers had a special reason for inviting the soldiers to dinner. Their son, Thomas, has been in the Pacific for 18 months and recently returned to the United States, Another son, Joseph Jr, 17, is still at home. “I'm just sick,” Mrs. Marer said. “I don't know what we'll do now. . . , I guess I'll] have to decide that when my husband comes home tonight”
Canceled After,
2328 Broadway,|
Discussing Indiana dairy farms at a dairy products conference at
the Hotel Severin today were (left to right) Professor H. W. Gregory, chief of the dairy department at Purdue university; Neal Kelley of the National Dairy council in Chicago, and Walter D. Hunnicutt of
the National Dairy Products Corp.
GOVERNMENT calculations showing that there would still be a shortage of milk and dairy prod« ucts after the defeat of Germany were explained today by Walter. D. Hunnicutt of the Naw tional Dairy Products Corp. New "York. Mr, Hunnicutt nddressed the In= diana Milk and Cream Improvement “Association, Inc, and the Indiana Manufacturers Dairy Products association at the Hotel Severin. An increase in milk production to 120,000,000,000 pounds in 1945 was requested by the war food administration last week. Production this year is estimated at 118,200,000,000. Mr. Hunnicutt said that the civilian population would have consumed all of this vear's milk production if it had been made available, Allowing for a net. cut in gov-
in New York:
ernment requirements and a possible cut in civilian purchasing power, Mr. Hunnicutt said that domestic demand would still exceed the supply. The government is now buying 20,000,000,000 pounds of milk both for our own armed forces and for lerid-lease.
DUST COVERS AUCKLAND AUCKLAND, N. Z, Nov, 21 (U, P.)~The city of Auckland was blanket today by a thick haze of reddish dust blown across the Tasman sea from the dust bowl area of Southeastern Australia, more than 1200 miles away.
fe ——————————— BALKAN LEADER IN MOSCOW LONDON, Nov. 21 (U. P.)—Dr. Ivan Subasitch, premier of Yugoslavia, arrived in Moscow at the head of an official delegation yesterday for a séries of conferences with Russian leaders,
COLOGNE RIOT SIGNS REPORTED
| Nazi War Prisoners Tell of Civilians Executed by
Gestapo.
WITH U. 8. FORCES IN HURTGEN FOREST, Germany, Nov, 21 (U. P)~-German prisoners of war sald today that disorders broke out recently in Cologne, and the gestapo is hanging civilians there for disobeying official orders. (Swiss dispatches last week quoted travelers from Germany as reporting. that a section of the Cologne inhabitants had come out openly against continuing the war, and 21 persons were hanged publicly in a single day.) Prisoners said they personally had seen evidence of anti-Nazi activity in Cologne. It included a crowd gathered arotind a billboard depicting Adolf Hitler in contorted caricature and bearing the legend, “Wanted by the German people for mass murder.” Nazi police dispersed the crowd before the poster and tore it down, the prisoners said. The onlookers displayed nothing but curiosity, and that was passive, they added.
FIVE-SIXTHS OF JURY ABSENT VALPARAISO, Ind, Nov. 21 (U. P.).—Porter county had a new grand jury today, ordered by Judge Ira Tilton when only one member of the panel answered a summons yesterday, Two were dead, two were serving on the petit jury and another could not be located.
ELECTION PROBERS | HINT NEW HEARINGS
Indiana's election fraud probe! was still “cooking” today, with U.| S. senate investigators hinting! strongly that the. inquiry ed eventually boil over into & fulldress public airing of fraud charges. | | As the senate campaign expenditures committee, sponsor of the! probe, prepared to sift prelimin- | ary investigation reports this week, | it was indicated at Claypool hotel | headquarters of the investigative staff that a sub-committee hear-| ing of balloting malpractioes will be: scheduled ‘either here or In Washingtofyie 1 Chief Senate Investigator Harois| Buckles was to fly to the capital! today with complete details of the! dé" material which he | period of 11 days. Most of the fraud allegations revolve around Marion county's elec- | tion-day confusion in which many persons were challenged at the polls | because their names had not been | recorded on registration books,
CIO PROPOSES NEW DEFINITION OF ‘STRIKE’
WASHINGTON, Nov. 21 (U. P.). | —The C. I. O. monthly “Economic Outlook” proposed. today that the term “employer-labor shutdown” be substituted for the word “strikes” to describe work, stoppages which | result from a dispute. ' It listed uhemployment, accidents and illness as. causing more lost man hours | Per month than these “employerlabor shutdowns.”
$1. FINE COSTS $136 ST. LOUIS, Nov. 21 (U. P)— Mrs, Louis Mercille of Rock Hil | was fined $1 for fishing without a | license last summer and decided | to fight the case. Yesterday she | paid $135 in court costs—and also | paid the fine.
DONNELL 2000 AHEAD
ST. LOUIS, Nov, 21 (U. P)— The lead of Republican Governor | Forrest Donnell over his Demos] cratic opponent, Attorney General | Roy McKittrick, in their race for |
votes today as additional absentee | ballots trickled in, |
onl i condi p+
'
Quiet Dignity
Every detail in your tribute to your loved ° : ones 18 carefully planned here, Quiet service and gracious . ‘environment ‘wil ease your sorrow,
CONKLE FUNERAL HOME In w gr.
"ROASTING CHICKENS
" Tender and Young, N. Y. Dressed_______________Lb
CORN FED DUCKS
THURINGER SAUSAGE -39¢ BRAUNSCHWEIGER
seat of his automobile, another man was held up on a downtown street
footpad last night. The. grocer, Albert Shallot, 38, of 1815 E. 48th st., closed his store
surprised by the bandit. a gun against the merchant's head, the bandit ordered him to drive to!
er ———————————
2 SENATORS OPPOSE
WAGE BOOSTS NOW
WASHINGTON, Nov, 21 (U, P)). -—Two prominent Democratic senators who often have opposed policies of the Roosevelt administration today strongly supported its apparent determination to hold rigidly to the little steel wage formula at least until Germany is beaten, Senators Walter PF. George (D. Ga.) and Edwin C. Johnson (D. Colo.) - asserted in interviews that the guard against inflation must be doubled as European fighting enters its crucial phase, “Inflation is the greatest enemy that we have, now that Hitler and the Mikado are on the run,” Johnson declared, “It behooves all of us, wage earners and all others, to minimize to the utmost the great dangers of inflation.” George sald he felt that smy attempt to increase the little steel wage formula at this time “might
be a dangerous experiment.”
For Your Thanksgiving , ho
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CALIFORNIA PEACHES ™ ®™» ¥o.2% 240 INDIANA TOMATOES Oxi ™o.? (2¢ BARTLETT PEARS 7», *32¢23¢ STOKELY'S PUMPKIN No. 2% {20 "RED CHERRIES Orgad rresn ws 24c JACKSON'S SALAD DRESSING <*™ 23 STOKELY'S APRICOTS .0'v *.2%30c NEW DILL PICKLES Tuy ind Quart 92g NEW PRUNE PLUMS J's: “2.2% (8c HEINZ TOMATO CATSUP 140s 238 STRAWBERRY PRESERVES }:7. i» 34c STOKELY'S CHILI SAUCE 12-00. {Bg NEW PURE STRAINED HONEY ae 28c SWANS DOWN CAKE FLOUR si 26¢ MUSSELMAN'S APPLE BUTTER “;2* 2(c CALUMET BAKING POWDER -~ ':L> (9¢ NEW SEEDLESS RAISINS 21> 26¢ DROMEDARY MIX Owner Bread Lame gg SUNMAID SEEDLESS RAISINS 15.00 166 TENDERONI 7. ven Sim2oni 3 Pes: 266 . HOLSUM PEANUT CRUNOH. > 3l¢ PURE GRAPE JUICE im Sui: 36e FLOUR So, %io 30e- o> 670 2° $1,017 PURE APPLE JUICE Hay Guten 34g STOKELY'S CORN Yyum %e¢ (4g PINEAPPLE JUICE © Mom. “ot (4g _STOKELY'S HONEY POD PEAS No. 3 16¢ GRAPEFRUIT JUICE Tras, “0% 29 SIFTED PEAS Garden No? (2¢. TOMATO JUICE Garden" 44-On 43g GREEN BEANS = Gam 2% 725s TREESWEET LEMON "Juice alll | FRESH LIMA BEANS - Biker wed (6c BURNETT'S VANILLA ,"o, Bs. 12¢
Dar ASPARAGU!
“All Green | Na, a 33¢
3 ; ase 1
PURE EGG NOODLES - ood "rn Tare AL Jackson’ s Jus, :
Merchant Robbed of $300; : Others Also Theft Victims
A North side grocer was robbed |a nearby alley, There, Shallot said, by a bandit who hid In the rear n, was robbed of $300.
In a brutal attack by three men,
and a woman lost her purse to a Wesley Todd, 4“, of 108 W. North
‘st.’ received a broken arm and other
|injuries shortly after midnight in!j {the 500 block of N. Capitol ave. |} at 1850 N. Alabama st. and went | to ‘his automobile, where he was | Pressing |
He told police he was robbed of $30 and a tire gauge, He was treated at City hospital and released. Mrs. Florence Harness, 48, of 1415 Park ave, alighted from a streetcar at 15th st. and Central ave. about 8 p. m, and a man about 24
SPRIGGS TO TALK*
“The Ups and Downs of Vertical Transportation” will be the subject of the talk by Chester T, Spriggs at the Kiwanis luncheon ‘at noon tomorrow in the Columbia club. Mr, Spriggs, who is a member of the
elevators and escalators and how they work.
club, will tell some of the history of i
jerked her purse from under her arm and ran down an alleay. The! purse contained about $30 and a
work badge, she said.
PLAN CARD PARTY
The Past President's club of Ma]. Harold C. Megrew auxiliary, United Spanish War Veterans, will hold a business meeting and card party at
7 p. m. Saturday at Central Y. W. C. A
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TURKEYS ROASTERS w STEWIN
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CRANBERRIES
Solid Red Cape Cod Extra Fancy Selected Berries
EMPEROR
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MICHIGAN
Large Jumbo Size Yonder and Well Bleached
U.S. No. | Candy Yams
Every Orange Extra Heavy With Sweet Health-Giving Julos
Fresh Home-Grown Marien Oo, H
POTATOES
SWEET POTATOES
TEXAS ORANGES
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28
