Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 13 December 1944 — Page 5
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A Fine Selection of Gifts REVLON HOPE CHEST
Polish, Adh d Includort oy bn $1.20 ing Tax MITCHELL ‘sto’ SHOP 343 MASS. AVE, LI. 4644
F WEDNESDAY, DEC. 18, 1044 ; = i fe of Invalided Husband | Prays Someone Will Help Her
Wife
(Continued From Page One)
treatments two and three times a week. . Although this husband is an invalid now, he will get well The doctor says he may be able to go back to work next summer, That, however, is six months away. toe #8 = HEADING YESTERDAY'S donors with the largest contribution in this year's Clothe-A-Child campaign was J. H. Mull Jr. with $400, Other contributors included Allison Night Shift Bowling league, Friday afternoon at Speedway alley, $30, ‘and Can't You Help, Too, $25. oes Donors who today helped buy Christmas cheer’ include night shift employees of departments T.M~-T.8—~B.C.,, ‘of Prest-O-Lite, Inc, with $52.55; the Heat Treat and Plating, and Plating Inspection - B shift at CurtissWright, $50;° Alpha chapter of Theta Nu Chi sorority, $40; A.R. Gwin Paint & Supply Co., $27.04; Variety club, In Memory of Adelaide Gallup Atkins, 30 employees of State Life Insurance Co. and” Zeta Kappa chapter of Delta Theta Tau sorority, each $25. ” n ” THERE ARE only 9 more days for The Times to shop for -all of Indianapolis’ needy children,
And with clothing more expensive
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please you in every way,
this year than ever ‘before, “it - doesn’t take long for funds to run low, / So, if you are planning a con-
now. i . . » - THERE ARE two ways you can help Clothe-A-Child: You can .send cask contribue tions to The Indianapolis’ Times, 214 W. Maryland st. Experienced shoppers will take the children to the stores and provide them with, the warm clothing they need. Or, if you prefer, you may shop fort the children yourself, All you have to do is call RI ley 5551 and ask for Clothe A - Child. Specify the day and hour you wish to shop and The Times will have thc child (or children if you wita to clothe more than one) at the Clothe-A-Child office, corner W. Washington and Senate at the appointed time. The child's parents will remain at the office while you go to the store— any one you prefer — and make the purchases. Office or factory groups, clubs, sororities and other organizations may take children in groups, as b many as they wish. . o ” : HEADQUARTERS FOR Clothe A-Child are at 301 W. Washington st., the southwest corner of West Washington and Senate ave. The office space has been fur. nished through the courtesy of the Metal Auto Parts Co. Inc. and is now occupied jointly by Clothe - A - Child and the downtown employment office of Metal Auto Parts.
'YUGOSLAVIAN QUEEN IS EXPECTING BABY
say jt is truly wonderful. It hasare- | leaction. Itloosensthe phlegm, |
| Queen Alexander of Yugoslavia is expecting a baby within five months, it was learned today. | The queen, formerly Princess | Alexandra of Greece, married King [Reter II of Yugoslavia March 20, 1944, in London, .
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LONDON, Dec. 13 (U. P.).—Young |
wT
ty INDIANA CLAYTON VAGUE ON COTTON SALE
Tells Senators His.Firm May Have Sold to Japs in September, 1941.
(Continued From Page One)
admitted that his company may have: ONE. Sold cotton to Japan in September, 1941, after. the “motal| embargo” had been placed . upon | sales to that country by then Secretary of State Cordell Hull, TWO. Sold cotton in July, 1042, through a South American subsidiary, to “G. IL. R. C.,” a French gov=| ernment purchasing agency,. for resale in occupied France,
its way into Japanese hands, Confronted with the documents by La Follette, Clayton said the sales might have been made, He pointed out again that he had at
in the firm as its principal stockholder. :
“Not Responsible”
“I don't remember that the secretary of state placed a moral em-
Clayton said, “but even so it is not something I was responsible for. I had divorced myself completely from the executive board.” “Don’t you as principal stockholder teel a certain responsibility?” La Follette demanded.
believe the men running the company would have responded in the right way to a moral embargo.”
{of an arrangement whereby 7000 |bales of cotton delivered at Barcelona were turned into yarn and
Anderson, Clayton subsidiary, oNeither had he heard that Anderson, Clayton received Brazilian bonds from the G. I. R. C. in July, 1942, for cotton to be sent into occupied ‘France. Clayton previously had told the
bargo on Japan on all products,” |
“Yes, I do,” Clayton said, “byt I,
POLIS TIMES
Armour Selected Spanish Envoy:
(Continued From Page One) |
leader, Miquel Maura, now in! France, Is seeking a peaceable transition from the ‘dictatorship ty| some more democratic regime. 3 Moreover he is konwn to have the| backing of a large cross-section of the Spanish people, from right to left. Only the Communists appear to be against it, ~*~
Events Reaching Climax
In Spain, as elsewhere in Europe, events are coming to. a. hectic climax, Whether it will mean civil war, as in Greece, remains to be seen, : | In any event. it is of the utmost importance that the United States, ! Great Britain, Soviet Russia and France agree on policy. Already in this country certain. groups are preparing to bring pressure on
THREE. Sold to firms in Shang-| Washington to intervene in Spain's hai cotton which ultimately found internal affairs. {
Ambassador Hayes has been ple- | tured by these same groups as an. [“appeaser,” a n d- “anti-Soviet.” | Nothing is further from the truth. {Ina thoroughly documented article
the time only a “general interest” in the December Harper's, Ernest
K. Lindley and Edward Weintal [reveal that at the very time he and the state department were thus being pilloried he was probably the most blunt-spoken of all our diplo- { mats. |
‘DEAD-EYE' KRUSE
[ Te
WINGS CIRCLE BAT
(Continued From Page One)
Miss Edna Weisman, man- | ager of the Hollywood shop, sald {the monster (she described it as
Clayton said he had never heard! having a four-foot wingspread) Was It was distract-|
she asserted, swooping as it! shipped into occupied France by an|did around customers and plaster- | |of-paris dress models in. various
| quite bothersome, ing,
stages of nudity. Miss | desperately for help,
attempted help, but none came. She
{from among bus drivers in the Cir-
Weisman said she called | especially |
attempted vainly. to recruit ald |
rowed
juvenile delinquent
committee he favored Secretary of cle bus station, she said, but the| Agriculture Claude A. Wickard's men, for some strange reason, shied | program for a gradual reduction of away. One of them, she attested, cotton subsidies in order to restore| replied, “I'm afraid of bats.” “one cotton price both in the United States and elsewhere in the world.”
Limits Testimony
As for “Batman” Kruse, he bor- | the b.. b. gun from the department. | Resting on his laurels, he said he]
"lin yesterday's hearing.
Senator "Tom Connary (D. Tex.) invited only committee members yesterday to question the witnesses When they posed inquiries touching of delicate phases of international politics, Connally effectively shut off discussion. He questioned the “propriety” of such remarks in an open hearing. There were notable such instances The first occurred when Senator Joseph PF. Guffey (D. Pa.) asked Stettinius: “Are the British now using lendlease against our Ethiopian allies?” Stettiniug gulped and Connally objected: } : “In view of the current war situation, Senator, do you think that a proper question?” ;
Withdraws Question
Guffey withdrew it. Later, Connally raised the “propriety” question. Senator James E. Murray (D. Mont.) asked Dunn whether Prime Minister Winston Churchill was “forcing the Ameri can state department to play second fiddle in this Greek thing.” Murray withdrew his question when Dunn promised to discuss the issue in closed session. While the nominations appeared to be sailing through committee swiftly, there was no let-up in “liberal” opposition to the appointees. President Philip Murray of the
protested that the C. I. O, does not feel that the names submitted “provide a balanced team for the conduct of our foreign affairs in the crucial years immediately ahead.”
Congress of Industrial Organizations |
1936.
FOR SURE TOMORROW
{ the storm in its eastward sweep across the nation and southern Can-
ada.
west,
below.
jobs. & Blizzard in Canada
New York were delayed as much as four hours.
to Miami and two-thirds of Texas was in the sub-freezing zone with
(as 21 degrees.
POLE REGIME BACKED
LONDON, Dec. 13 Polish circles announced today that
Although Murray did not mention any of the nominees specifically, most of the “liberal” opposition is leveled at Clayton, wealthy Dallas,
+% Allies Free France, Belgium and \ Holland %* Japs Smashed in Marianas % Robot Bombs over England
Soviets pj, Front 9
Tex., cotton broker.
LET'S FINISH THE JOB!
your
{the “underground” cabinet in Po|land, consisting of representatives {of the four main Polish parties, had lagreed to support the government |of Premier Tomasj Arciszewski.
eo
War Bond
purchases will
do it?
learned to shoot at the PF. B. 1] olice school in Quantico, Va, in
SUN IS.COMING OUT
(Continued From Page One) |
Up to 22 inches of snow were re-| ported in parts of West Virginia,| Pennsylvania and valley stations in| the Smokies and sub-zero tempera- | ture readings were registered in the with Yellowstone - National! park hitting a national low of 17 | In Buffalo vital war plants were | forced to shut down because em- | ployees were unable to get to their
The stock exchange in Toronto, Canada, was closed in the worst blizzard in southern Canada’s. his- | tory, and trains from Winnipeg and |
Frost warnings were posted even
the thermometer dropping to as low |
(U. P)~—
x
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