Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 25 November 1944 — Page 2
CR
held at the Flanner and Buchanan
~ containing $14 after slugging him,
see
A Weekly Sizeup by the Staff of the Scripps-Howard
(Continued From Page One)
faster than we were knocking-them down. So we're starting where we did with’ Germany so long ago. i Nete:. There's more bad news for Tokye on Consolidated. Vultee's
assembly lines. Off these lines
Consolidated’s new—and some say better—counterpart of the Boeing
8-20 Superfortress. Better, they think, because in
changes in designs and equipment dictated hy battle experience of
the Superforts. The new B-52's will be known
. »
HERE ARE the facts about state,
There will be no change unléss Cordell Hull decides to retire. If that happens, Undersecretary of States Stettinius would have the inside track, with War Mobilization Director James F, Byrnes
as second choice,
_ In either event, but particularly if -Stettinius is selected, ¥. D. R. would continue to be his own foreign minister. .
] THE MIDDLE WEST, whose
high-lighted by the big majority Illinois gave Scott Lucas, will gain in representation on the senate foreign relations committee in the next congress. Lucas will be selected to fill one of three democratic
vacancies.
Another may be filled by Senator Hatch of New Mexico. . bag not been reached as to whether the third will be filled, On the Republican side, if selections are made by- seniority, posts will probably go to Senators Bridges of New Hampshire and Gurney of South Dakota, neither isolationist. - But Taft of Ohio is a contender, and the Republican committee of committees is still dominated by that school of thought. Senator Ball of Minnesota, who supported PF. D. R. the B2-H2 group, seems to have little chance.
. 8 =
Committees in House
COMMITTEE ASSIGNMENTS absorb house members, too, Early under-the-surface scrap in the new congress will be attempt by conservative Democrats, wor with Republicans, to themselves in key posts in the house. : Conservatives particularly want to control rules committee, appropriations, ways and means, . »” .
~ Universal Training |
CONGRESSMEN favoring uni» versal military training, as advocated by the President and the war department, of strength behind them, as yet untapped. : i
if
i
the men who actually draft, probably know t public reaction to it others. ifferences of opinion at
age at which universal military training should start, the point at which a young man's education should be interrupted. :
The Phone Strike
WAR LABOR BOARD'S plan to create special panel to consider of phone operators at , 0, where recent strike originated, would establish pattem for handling similar dis putes on industry-wide basis, Issue is new In WLB experience: The payment of subsistence bonuses to workers transferred to war centers from other localities. Panel would be responsible directly to board here, circumvent ing time-consuming procedure of handling by regional board,
The Upton Close Case ..
SPECIAL HOUSE committee in~yestigating. federal communica tions commission will decide next week whether to inquire into refease of Commentator Upton
rH ;
°
i
. ” ®
The Facts About Top Cabinet Post
Washington
Newspapers £5
are now coming the new B-32's,
the B-32's have been incorporated
as “Dominators.”
the top cabinet post—secretary of
abandonment of isolationism was
Decision
for re-election, one of
by N. B, 0. because of pressure by “Communistic elements.”
2 2 =n Highway Fund Fight CITY AND farm congressmen will tangle next week ®ver apportionment of 1.5 billion dollar highway fund. Under farm pressure, house roads committee cut $26,000,000 from allotment for eity street improvements, - added =the same amount to secondary roads. Another melee is expected between members from heavily-pop-ulated, small-area states and those from sparsely-populated, big area states, . The former say pending bill's formula for dividing funds deprives them of maximum re-em-ployment possibilities. House is expected to cut federal contribution for city street work from 60-40 matching to 50-80. ” a's
. Reason for WPB Peace
ONE REABON WPB, scene of one of Washington's biggest intramural quarrels, is serene now is that 30-year-old J. A. Krug, Donald Nelson's successor as chairman, has the active help of 74-year-old Bernard M. Baruch, top industrial adviser of both world wars. ; Mr, Baruch, who, in a trouble- - shooting capacity, drafted conversion and reconversion plans, sits with Mr. Krug at conferences, asks pointed questions, makes pertinent suggestions.
Loading the Mails WHILE POSTOFFICE department worries. about the Christmas rush, postal employees, seeking to make their $400 raise permanent, have already loaded the mailmen. Thousands and thousands of letters are delivered daily on Capitol Hill in a great write-your-congressmen drive fostered by postal workers. » ” » REP. CLARE BOOTHE LUCE, off to tour the European front as
a member of the house military affairs committee; took with her
Olose, . who says he was dropped
fine ‘photographic equipment.
Harry Shipman
Was Prominent in Masonry
Harry Shipman, active in Masonry for 45 years and a Mississippl river boat pilot in the '90's, died last night at the home of his daughter, Mrs. Sylvan L, Mouser, 4526 Washington blvd, after an illness of two months. He was 76, Services for Mr. Shipman will be
mortuary at 2 p. m. Monday. Masonic services will be’ cone ducted by the Calvin W. Prather lodge. - Mr. Shipman joined the Maso
TWO MEN BEATEN AND ROBBED HERE
Two men were beaten by thugs last night, one so badly that he had to be treated at City hospital, and the purses of two women were snatched, police reported today. Charles Roeder, 62, of 602 8. Meridian st, was attacked by two men “at Indiana ave. and New York st. who took his billfold
He was taken to City hospital. Two men jumped Frost Pang, 50, driver for the Sterling Cleaners 617 BE. Michigan st, as he went the fear Michigan st. and robbed Broadway, was on 22d st. when two her purse. theft of $125 , check -for*$11.
¥ y
}
of his truck at Temple |;
Dies Here;
man and Luxembourg borders also seemingly had developed, at least temporarily, into a battle of attri. tion,
south of Saarbrucken likewise had been halted after smashing two miles across the Saar river into Postroff and the vicinity of Baerendorf, one mile farther south, in
under ceaseless enemy artillery fire.
Bayonet - Swinging Yanks Smash Through at Hurtgen Forest. (Continued From Page One)
mowed down the Germans as they emerged from the forest,
Do or Die Charge
With 800 yards to go, Kemp lined up his men in a cold, pre-dawn drizzle. ‘
woods, men,” he told them. “We're going to do it today or die in the attempt.” Many did die, but they are out of the woods now. The doughboys closed so fast on the dug-in Germans that the enemy artillery did not get firing orders until they were at hand to hand grips with the Nazis. The German shells fell harmlessly behind the Americans, and the Nazis couldn't adjust their fire for fear of killing their own men,
‘Heinles’ Run Screaming
Our artillery, working in close synchronization with forward observers, jumped in short-fused air bursts. “The screaming Heinies: ran like
and tongue-tied by fear, and dozens of German stragglers now are being rounded up in the woods, sometimes a mile or two from the actual scene of fighting,” Gorrell reported, Ninth army headquarters announced that Bourheim, one and & half miles southwest of Julich, had been completely. occupied after at least. two days of bitter: street battles. 24 Miles From Cologne Capture of the town put American tanks and infantry 24 miles almost due west of Cologne, One Mark IV and four Mark V tanks were destroyed in the final phase of the battle, bringing the 9th army's bag for the current offensive to 136 enemy panzers destroyed, Three miles to the northwest, however, the 9th army fell back slightly under a Gefman counterattack that carried into Merzenhausen, eight miles southeast of Gellenkirchen. The American 1st army also was forced to yield hard-won terrain, giving to counter-attacking, Germans control of high ground nearly two miles southeast of Weisweiler on the Aachen-Cologne military highway 10 miles northeast of Aachen,
Fighting in Welsweller
Other 1st army troops fought thelr way house by house through Weisweiler itself. They drove the enemy from Putzlohn, farther north. (The London Times correspondent at supreme headquarters reported that the "most decisive battle in history” was being fought in the Aachen gap along the approaches to Cologne and the Rhine.) Lt. Gen, George 8. Patton's 3d army offensive along an 11-mile front in the Saar basin just east of the junction of the French, Ger-
Saar River Push Halted Other 3d army elements 37 miles
northeastern France. Front dispatches said armored troops were fighting off a stubborn German counter-attack and were
Good news came from the southern end of the front, where French and American elements of Lt. Gen, Alexander M. Patch’s 7th army cleared all of Strasbourg, historic capital of Alsace-Lorraine, except a tiny bridgehead covering the immediate approaches to the Rhine bridges. A security blackout-continued to cloak progress of the lst army column spering up the west bank of the Rhine river toward Colmar,
in New Albany in 1809. He was a charter member of the Prather lodge where he had been a high priest. A Mississippl river boat pilot in the "90's, he was a member of the Sons and Daughters of Pioneer Rivermen, the Society of Indiana Pioneers and the Tabernacle Pres byterian church. Born in New Albany, Ind., the son of John L. and Lucinda Evelyn Graham Shipman, he married Luella Smith of Greenville, Ind, in 1899. ‘They moved to Indianapolis in 1004 where she died four years ago. Mr, Shipman, who could trace his ancestry to pre-Revolutionary days, was active in the real estate and life insurance business here many years. Surviving besides Mrs. Mouser, is another daughter, Mrs. Wallace P. Daggy, of Phoenix, Ariz; a ‘son, Clarence T. Shipman, and a grandson, both of Indianapolis.
NEWTON TO LEAD BAPTIST CHORUS
George Newton will ‘direct the choir of the Pirst Baptist church in the singing of Part II of Haydn's “Creation” at 7:30 p. m. tomorro in the church, : . Miss Doris Linville is soprano soloist and Bernard De Vore is tenor. Mrs. W, H. Newcomer, organist, will play, :
Tt ——————————————. HURLEY GETS CHINA POST
WABHINGTON, Nov. 25 (U.P). — name of Maj. Gen, Patrick
vivors of the enemy garrison were
thel’
halfway between the Swiss border and Strasbourg, in an effort to complete encirclement of the German pocket.
Rhine Rumors Persist
Rumors persisted that allied patrols already had pushed hcross the Rhine, but 7th army headquarters disclaimed” that any of its troops had forded the river and there likewise was no confirmation from French 1st army sources. At the northern end of the front, British 2d army forces gained 2000 to 3000 yards across Dutch marshlands- before Venlo, They captured Grubbenvorst, on the Meuse river three miles north ‘of Venlo. ’ One unconfirmed report said the British had penetrated Venlo itself.
RUSSIANS REPORTED DRIVING IN LATVIA
(Continued From Page One)
Memel, 52 Soviet infantry divisions and huge tank forces were reported trapped on the Courland peninsula in western Latvia, ; " Berlin claimed the destruction of 63 Russian tanks in the first few hours of the battle, The reported new offensive coincided with the triumphant conclusion of the month-old’ campaign on Saare illand, where the last sur-|
killed, captured or driven into the The liberation of Baare opened the Baltic sea to the Russian fleet.
Hurley has been submitted to
[STALEMATE AT AACHEN BROKEN
“Let's get to hell out of these
stuck pigs in all directions, crazed |,
military occupation of Germany by
y
"Torch and Go'
SEI NF
po A J fo WAR. APCT— A
Looks like the Statue of Liberty is giving the “hot foot” to the hélicopter with her torch but it’s really a demorfitration of the split-inch maneuverability of a coast guard plane, This pheto was taken from another helicopter.
REACH ACCORD ON REICH FATE
Big Three Completes Its, Blueprint for
Ocoupation.
WASHINGTON, Nov. 26 (U, P.) — Unanimous agreement. by the United States, Russia and Great Britain on any and all measures to be taken with respect to the treatment of Germany after the war is provided for in a tentative blueprint of occupation machinery worked out by the European “advisory commission, The tentative plan provides for
all three major allied powers, each in it sown designated zone, and is flexible enough to permit France and other nations sich as the Low Countries to share in the occupation machinery. Undersecretary of State Edward R. Stettinius Jr., announced yesterday that British, American and Russian members of the advisory commission had drawn up the tentative plan which now will be submitted to their respective governments for study.
Three Occupation Zones
France became a commission member after the accord was reached, \ The present agreement concerns only the machinery of dealing with post-war Germany and not with details of the treatment she will be aocorded by the victorious allies, an authoritative source emphasized. The three msones of occupation, as agreed on so far, are: Southwest Germany-—U, 8.; Northwest Ger tain, and Eastern Ger-many--Russia. Joint occupation of Berlin is envisaged,
POSTHUMOUS AWARD GIVEN TO HOOSIER
The silver star was awarded posthumously yesterday to Capt. Altus PF. McReynolds of Crawfordsville, Ind, at ceremonies held at a formal post parade at Ft. Harrison. His wife, Mrs. Betty J. McReynolds, received the award from Col. Henry E. Tisdale, commanding officer of Ft. Harrison, Capt. McReynolds, who formerly was personnel sergeant-major at Ft. Harrison, was cited for gallantry in action in France on June 7, the day’ after D-day. The officer was in charge of 350 enemy prisoners when artillery fire made his command post stockade untenable. , While Capt. McReynokis marched the enemy soldiers to the rear, preventing possible panic among them, a shell fragment struck and killed him.
HEADS CONCILIATION SERVICE
WASHINGTON, Nov. 28 (U. P). —Howard T. Colvin, assistant director of thé*U. 8. Conciliation Service of the Department of Labor, becomes seting head fo the serve ice today as Dr. John R. Steelman
_ THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
.|report on file today with County
- |Dr, Carleton B, McCulloch, club
LUDLOW LISTS" $3000 EXPENSE
Campaign Donation $1000 to County Group Included. . Campaign expenditures of approximately $3000 in his successful
$id for re-election to congress were listed by Rep. Louis Ludlow in a
of
Clerk A. Jack Tilson. Of the $3000, Rep. Ludlow, who defeated .his Republican opponent, Judge Judson L, Stark, gave $1000 to the Marion County Democratic Central committee, while the remainder was used mainly for the purchase of newspaper advertising. The Schricker-Jackson Good Government club received $13,971.44,
treasurer, reported to Mr, Tilson, The club, which supported the de. feated candidates, Governor Henry FP. Schricker for U. 8, senator and Senator Samuel D, Jackson for governor, spent $0684.17, most of it in contributions to the Democratic state committee,
Other Reports Given
Other financial reports included: Paul R. Brown, successful Republican candidate for county surveyor, $229.84, including a $200 gift to the Republican county organization, and a $20 contribution to the Republican victory organization. John W. Atherton, Republican state senator-elect, $231.60, including $200 to the Republican county organization. Roger G. Wolcott, Republican state senator-elect, $370, of which $300 was given to the county committee. Josephine Wade, unsuccessful Democratic candidate from the 2d district, $300, including $250 to the Democratic county committee. Earlé L. Johnson, unsuccessful candidate on the Democratic ticket for county surveyor, $350, all to the county committee. Timothy P. Sexton, unsuccessful Democratic candidate for state senator, $400, including a $3560 donation to the county organization, * Lloyd D. Claycombe, circuit court judge-elect, $1025, which included $1000 to the Republican county committee,
NAVY GIVES PRESS
(Continued From Page One) 4
also has several dials and knobs. A small platform, perhaps a foot
which’ are mounted several dials. That is all to he seen when you logk at the Norden bombsight. The sight was put on display at the Museum of Science and Industry with its co-designers, Carl L. Norden and Capt. F'. I. Enwistle, assistant chief of the research and development section of the navy's ordnance division, looking on. Naval technicians took the bomb‘sight parts out of a steel carrying case four feet square, each one from a locked compartment, and put them together, Two sailors with 45 caliber automatic pistols on their hips stood by. The faces of three dials were taped over. The reporters stared and the cameras clicked. Then the sight was put back into its box and taken away. “This is only a forerunner of greater events to come,” Capt, Enwistle said, “But for obvious reasons similar to the ones for keeping the technical details of the sight secret, they will be proved and shown by the results. “The Norden aight is being continuously improved and there never will be a sight to replace the Norden.” |, . Capt, Entwistle granted that “the enemy by now has some indication of the instrument which has caused so much damage,” but said he doubted that even “with all the scientific talent in Germany,” a sight like it or similar-to 4t could be built by the Nasis during this war, The navy was unveiling the sight because it wanted the public to be “further acquainted with what the navy and the armed forces are doing,” he said,
EISENHOWER'S ORDER HINTS LONGER WAR
WASHINGTON, Nov, 25 (U, P.). —A possible indication that Gen, Dwight - D. Eisenhower expects to be still slugging it out with the reichswehr next spring was seen
output, return-
left the post which he had held for 10 years.
Thunderbolt pilot Lt. David G. Singleton of Hammond, Ind., was a
Hoosier Pilot Credited With
ing the industry to its 1943 midyear peak production period. -
- |ing the Germans in France.
square, projects fromthe box upon|
Dreams of spending Christmas at home held special meaning to Pvt. Delbert Herald, Indianapolis infantryman who lost his life fight-
If the war in Europe ended before Dec. 25, as he believed it would, the soldier hoped to be home with his wife, Josep , his two-year-old son, Michael Joe, and his parents. He was fighting for all of them, ‘and for another life, his then unborn son. : : The new baby was expected. in November, He wouldn't understand what Christmas meant, but it would be his. first CHristmas and his father had dreams of being home for the big event. The baby was born yesterday, Pvt. Herald was the father of another baby boy, a little boy born into.a world of war which had al-
JAPS MINIMIZE TOKYO DAMAGE
Blandly Ignore Towering Smoke Over Factory Hit by B-29's. (Continued From Page One) missed the raid as their “easiest mission.”
Gen, Henry H. Arnold and other leaders of the 30th bomber command, meanwhile, revealed that the initial B-29 strike had set in motion a carefully planned campaign for the systematic bombardment of the Japanese homeland. The attack will be continued with increasing, force until the enemy's war machine has been destroyed completely. 1 Closer Bases Planned
They disclosed that the campaign calls for establishment of bases even closer to Japan than Saipan—some 1500 miles from Tokyo~although in general the 'B-20 bases in the Mari. anas, China and India complete the strategic pattern for the attack, More bad news for Tokyo came from Gen. Douglas MacArthur's headquarters, where it was an‘nounced that 4500 or more Japanese troops were killed off Masbate yes-
MacArthur also reported the sinking or damaging of -14 ‘other Japanese vessels, including another destroyer sunk off Borneo, in a series of air raids throughout the East Indies,
The Japanese tried to strike back at American installations on Leyte, but at least 42 of their planes were shot down by American fighters and ground gunners. In the land fighting, MacArthur's troops pushed southward toward the Ormoc plain after crossing the Leyte river 800 yards below Limon. The Japanese, still throwing their reserves into the battle piecemeal, hurled their 26th division into an unsuccessful counter-attack southwest of Limon.
Japs Report New
Raid on Manila
By UNITED PRESS The Japanese-controlled Manila
radio said “about 60" American car-rier-borne planes bombed Manila and Clark fleld today, the FCC
reported. The Manila sald the attack began with high level bombing of shipping in Manila bay, described in recent allied reports as a graveyard of Japanese shipping rimmed with the wreckage of shore installations as a result of a series of U, 8. aerial assaults, As usual the Japanese claimed that the attack on shipping in the bay was “ineffective.” Lipa and Batangas in southern Luzon also were attacked, the broadcast said, in what appeared to be a strike of considerable scope. Japanese fighter planes were reported to have challenged the bombers, but “the results are not as yet ascertained.” Witnesses in downtown Manila were quoted as saying that they American planes by accu-
DINING CAR WAITERS ARRESTED BY F. B..I
WASHINGTON, Nov. 2 (U. P).
:
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‘Netherlands
terday “when American fighter.
PEEK AT BOMBSIGHT):-
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ready taken the life of his father. Pvt. Herald was killed Aug. 27 without knowing his son ‘would be a month old on. Christmas eve, the eve he had hoped to spend with his family, . He had been overseas since April, having left for Italy immediately after spending a furlough with his family. He fought through the Italian campaign and participated in the invasion of southern France.
— SATURDAY, Nov.%, 1044 Death Dashes Soldier's Hope Of Christmas With Family
F. B. 1, OUTLINES 12-YEAR RECORD
Grows Into Organization of ‘Many Technicians, Val-
uable Equipment.
For 1g years the F. B, IL in Washington . has been performing scientific feats in modern magie for
Midwest law enforcement agencies,
In September his wife, who was | Mid
living with her parents at New Augusta, received a telegram that he was missing in action. For a month the soldier's wife and parents, Mr, and Mrs, T. W. Herald, 3008 W. Vermont st, lived in hope that he was safe, Then Oct. 13, six“ weeks before the birth of her son, Mrs. Herald was notified that her husmand was dead.
Yank Subs Down 2 Jap Warships, - - 25 Other Vessels
WASHINGTON, Nov. 25 (U.P.. —American submarines have sunk 27 more Japanese vessels including a destroyer and a gunboat in operations in Pacific and Far Eastern waters, the navy announced today. In addition to the two warships, the latest bag of the American undersea craft .included a transport,
four tankers, three cargo transports
and 17 cargo vessels, This brought to 854 the number of enemy vessels sunk by U. 8. submarines in this war. In addition, 37 vessels are listed as probably sunk and 116 damaged, for an overall total of 1010 enemy vessels hit. Enemy combatant ships sunk by
subs total 80, with 11.-more probably sunk and 116 damaged,
The navy also disclosed that a submarine operating under U. 8. control has sunk 4500 tons of enemy shipping in Netherlands East Indian waters, EE —————————
SLATE LEADERS FOR ASSEMBLY
Republican Cauous Set for Legislature's 1945 . Program, Republican majority members of
the 1045 generis! assembly will
caucus Dee. 5 to choose senate and house leaders and organize committees. : Scheduled for re-election at the session are House Speaker Hobart
Creighton of Warsaw, Senate Majority Leader John Van Ness of Valparaiso, Leader George Henley of Bloomington, all Republicans.
and House Majority
At that time Republican legis-
lators will also select the legislative steering committee and draft
a “preliminary blueprint of major proposed legislation, Bureau Shifts Planned Chief issue on the tentative agenda will be plans for*“streamlining” the state government strueture by. regrouping similar departments under yet-to-be-created general divisions. Yesterday the Commission for Interstate Co-operation, a nonpartisan body, of which State Treasurer-elect Frank Millis is chairman, appointed a sub-com-mittee to study proposed expansion of the legislative research bureau, Most G. O. P. leaders favor enlargement of the research staff as a method of “clarifying” the hundreds of bills dropped in the hopper
“In observing the 12th anniversary this week of the F, B. I, central ¢rime laboratory in Washington, Percy Wyly II, special agent in charge of the Indianapolis office today cited development of the in= stitution from “one technician and a single microscope” to its current status boasting “scores of technicians and $1,000,000 worth of equipment,” As an example of the special service provided local enforcement agencies by the F. B. I's crime laboratory? Mr, Wyly recalled the following case: Indiana officers sent to the labe oratory a woman's coat and speci=
mens of paint from an automobile ’
suspected of hitting her in an ace
cident, Paint Provides Clue
The car involved had failed to stop. The driver of the suspect automobile disclaimed any connec tion with the mishap, - ~« F. B. I technicians, working with microscopes, combed particles of paint from the right sleeve of the coat and found that it was similar in texture and color to paint scraped from the suspected automobile, ’ The paint specimens were then analyzed and found to be identical in composition. The results of these tests finally played the major role in convicting the original suspeet. “PF, B. I technicians frequently can gain much information from minute evidence,” Mr. Wyly said. Typical of these clues are such things as dried saliva on cigaret butts; dirt scraped from a shoe sole; soil particles from trouser
cuffs; fingernail dirt; paint chips.
Many Trails Followed
Other routine problems confront ing F. B. I technicians are identi-" fication. of suspect blood stains: handwriting comparisons; matching of hairs and feathery bits of fibers: classification of body fluids and bulls ‘identifications. though the crime laboratory in Washington has been rushed with special war work, “it has handled the technical problems of local officers throughout the emergency period,” said Mr. Wyly. “This assistance doesn't cost the state or local agencies anything,” he concluded. “It's F. B. 1's cone tribution to more effective law enforcement.” : TE ————————
LAFOLLETTE ACCEPTS MARSHALL FIELD BID
Times Special WASHINGTON, Nov. 25. — Rep. Charles M. LaFollette, Evansville Republican, has accepted an invitation to speak at a dinner for Marshall Field in Chie cago Dec. 4, he ann ‘today. Vice President Wallace is to be the Democratic speaker. The occasion is the third anniversary of the foun , Field of the Chicago rig ‘ »
Double Check » This “Peoples”
in the course of the 61-day Aviation Fund Offered The Interstate Co-operation Commission also resolved to finance the proposed state aviation commission through appropriation out of the state general fund, Herschel A. Hollopeter, chairman .of the governor's committee on aviation, outlined the Indiana aviation program, which is expected to consist of creation of a three or six mem-. ber commission, headed by a fulltime director. . John Taylor of the state health board milk division said he would legislation mandating the use of pasteurized milk in the manufacture of cheese in Indiana.
BRITISH TRADE UNION CAUTIONED BY GREEN
NEW ORLEANS, La. Nov. 25 (U. P.) ~The British trade union congress was urged today by William Green, president of the A. F. of L., to consider carefully before joining Soviet trade unions and the C. I. O. to form a new world federation.
PERSONAL LOAN PLAN
Cash Amount | -18 You You Receive | Repay Payments 09. | . 150.00 | 181.30 B14 200.00 | 215.00 11.9%
250.00 268.82 22.40 00 | %8 TT850.00 | 816.94
TTA | est | wa
Loans are made for less than one gear if desired and in amounis more than $450. :
THE PEOPLES STATE BANK
130 E. Market
' Member Federal Insurance
WAVE YOUR TOWER
OPEN SUNDA ik jd i CHAM ORN TM IRVINGTON STUDIO} DO)
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8. Sgt. Cha bf Mrs. Della ford ave;, in] V Pvt. Willis Alabama st. Pfc. ‘Rober! Denny st,, in Pvt. Warre E. 23d st., in ] First Lt, J Boulevard pl. Pfc. Fred croft ave, in Marine Pf 2008 8. Merid
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Sgt. Baird eounty and Jackson coun his aunt ai mother, Mrs Seymour; thi ter Thompso Balem Allma William Spic] other brothe olis; Joe, Sey and Roy, Ww known,
Pvt. Willia Rev, and Mr 8. Alabama wounded Nov been in serv seas about si Pvt. Renne was employec
army in Jan his basic trai Ga., and AS sylvania Stal England in / The 21-ye: was employe ufacturing Ce
First Lt. J band of Mr Boulevard p 6-in German: the 1st arm Lt. Houstc James Haw! entered the ! The 29-year overseas 12
Pfc. Fred and Mrs, P Bancroft ave ed Nov. 10 1 was serving had been o ber, 1944. Pvt. Mille April, 1943, training at ( then was s specialized. | was sent Alabama, A gradual school, Pvt. tended Ind He. Phi Kappa
FREER, “REye Be
