Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 17 January 1945 — Page 3
U.S.
E OATH
n. 17 (U.P). youngest nahistory today Mary Martin, udly took the er new coun- | persons be'ederal court. \ in Canada; months old Martin, .
lack market
Ft. Wayne, J. 8. Federal gert on five on-meat and
et for George who allegedly t proper cer
R CHEAPER
, 17 (U. PD. n's synthetic w producing
he 1810" 30price of nate
'y of Comd today,
etre rept HITE
EY FLOOR 0_FLOOR
v
lize, the 1st army mored wedge into: the outskirts of Bo
in some strength : Sere In dsb
‘WEDNESDAY, JAN
YANKS TEAR AT
CAVING: SALIENT
British Slowed | in New’ Drive : |
‘By Big Blizzard; 30th Gains.
(Continued From Page One)
1ittl& over a mile souths<of FaymonZ ville. Front dispatches revealed that 3d army units m#de a limited obJective attack in the Tettingen area 13 miles southeast of Luxembourg City . yesterday, They advanced on both sides and through Butzdorf and advanced into the woods beyond it.
To the northwest, the 3d and 1st armies joined in strong force along the Ourthe river near Houffalize. Except for earlier patrol meet-
ings. in..the. same general area, itl} T™Ns
was the first union of the armies since the German offensive split
-them in mid-December.
The 6th armored division, in an advance of a mile and a half, cut the Longvilly-Bourcy road. Third army armor advanced east
of the Bastogne-Houffalize road to |};
a point a mile west of Cowan, two miles southeast of Houffalize. Hard fighting still raged in the Houffalize grea: where a few panzer units were ' struggling to escape envelopment by the American 1st and 3d armies. But the focal point of the Ardennes battle had shifted eastward to the St. Vith area. * Late dispatches said the Nazis were being squeezed inexorably back across their own frontier.
Nazis Compressed
The remnants of Marshal Karl von Rundstedt's three attacking armies were compressed into a thin band of Belgian and Luxembourg soil. The German salient extends down about 50 miles along its eastern base from Monschau to the Echternach area. It measures about 12 miles at its widest point. An allied communique reported that the Germans were being forced back all along the Ardennes front. They were giving ground, fairly rapidly on the southern and western flanks and fighting back furiously against three American 1st army divisions driving in from the northwest of their last strong point at St Vith. Fog, sleet and snow hampered the British and limited their air support. A force of R. A, F. Mosquita bombers. braved the miser-
able weather to bomb and strafe
the Nazi lines throughout the night. More than 1200 R. A. F. bombers blazed a trail of destruction through four cities along a 300-mile front from the German Ruhr to Czechoslovakia last night and early today: U. 8. 8th air force bombers followed up in a daylight strike at Germany. They blasted oil and Uboat plants,
Oil Plants Struck The main weight of the R. A. F.
nw 1945. _ -_- Polish Capital Is Liberated
\
[Bt LIN Lt \
ON!
-y y may
.
“os,
od Bydgoszcz
GERMANY - 0 - ih h x a steow - Grojec’ ® ; > Gor n or N, dg : e Dresden". Liegn NUE Lubl elden « egeits Brodon NS, Ciesto Nowa ahi.
Lage; 1 Souther MILES
or \,
¢ e
ang!
fo Fistula
TN
Lodz
L=1 ¥-.2
Bi piiunbmnior
Krakow “ Tornow
~~ 7
Lucene AY HUNGARY
Warsaw has been swept up in
beyond Kielce in the south in a
(Continued From Page One)
it in a pincers. Cutting it off from the west, Sovfet assault forces stormed Warsaw from three directions and wrested it from the Germans. Russians Slash Roads Swinging up behind the capital from a great bridgehead south of it, the Russians captured Zyradow, 29 miles southwest of Warsaw, and cut the roads running west from the city, Then the White Russian army stormed across the Vistula north of
Warsaw and wheeled down to close
the pincers and isolate .the city. The Soviets stormed in from three directions and avoided a dangerous crossing of the broad Vistula from the long-held Praga suburb. The Russians “by combined blows from the north; west and south captured the capital of our ally, Poland, the city of Warsaw, the most stiategic center of the German defeises on the river Vistula,” Stalin said. He paid tribute to troops fighting under 13 generals, including the commander-in- chief of the Polish 1st army. Stalin thus revealed that the Poles had taken part in the strategy which liberated their capital.
night offensive was thrown against synthetic oil plants, already insuf-| ficient to fuel Germany's faltering war machine, : On the Alsace front, where the; U. 8. Tth army had been parrying| strong German thrusts for more| than two weeks, the
Also praised were four generals of ‘artillery, six generals of armor, {and seven generals of the Red air | force.
Two Great Armies ; Southwest. of Warsaw, two great
Americans Soviet armies were moving across
swung back hard. with a counter -{the frozen plaigs on the direct road
offensive. They scored some initial successes
to Berlin.
North of Warsaw the Nazis’ ac- |-
against -the enemy’s Rhine bridge-| knowledged that the Russians had head north of Strassbourg and his|smashed through the defenses along
foothold in the old Maginot line on the edge of the Hagenau forest, Lt. Gen. Alexander M. Patch’s
the east bank of the Vistula and on the Narew. A Nazi gommunique said 40 Rus-
troops hit into the center of the|sian infantry divisions and several
seven-mile-wide bridgehead Germans had carved out on the]
the |
tank corps—500,000 ‘men by conservative estimate — blasted “deep
west bank of the Rhine some eight | breaches” in the defenses -north of
to 15 miles north-northeast of Strasbourg. At last reports they had pushed the enemy back a mile or more in the Herlisheim area.
Slash Road
The Yanks cut the road and _railway lines between Herlisheim and Drusenheim, two miles to the northeast, : They drove armored wedges into the German defenses north and south of Gambsheim, the pivot of the Nazi bridgehead eight miles
‘above Strasbourg.
Farther to the northwest, the Americans surged back across blackened heaps of rubble. in, the streets of Hatten on the northern edge of the Hagenau forest, They recaptured three-quarters of the town in fighting reminiscent of the struggle for Cassino on the Italian front, . Field dispatches sald the Nazis were well-entranched in a cluster of ruined buildings in the southwestern end of the town. They were fighting back savagely with-tanks and mobile artillery. Equallysfierce fighting swayed
’ through the streets of Rittershofen, %a mile to the west.
The doughboys were closing in
. slowly on two strong: pockets of re-
sistance in the town graveyard and a church, . There were no important changes on the French 1st army sector south of Strasbourg nor in the Bitche salient to the west where American troops were grinding slowly into the western and southern sides of the
.. Nazi pocket.
Lt. Gen. George 8. Patton's 3d army scored gains running, to a mile or more in the Bastogne area yesterday, extending their lines to an arc extending roughly five to six miles north, northeast and east of that town,
Nazis Surrounded Scattered German rear guards
who were cut off were reported surrounded in a 15-mile pocket west of Houffalize, Their capture or destruotion was expected: to be only & matter of a day or so.
Ning ‘miles northeast’ of Houffa-, e an ar-
vigny, -German coyeting forces el battling
remaining to St. Vith:
Sertiom of Wiel X
r
Warsaw, : Southwest of Warsaw, the Ger-
MANY SLUM HOMES HERE, MORGAN SAYS
(Continued From Page One)
housing for the dispossessed families. “It is a challenge to the city.” ¥ He revealed that orders to comply with the sanitary code were to be sent today. to the owner of a house at 203 N. Belmont ave. Dr. Morgan said an inspection of the two-story structure yesterday had revealed it was occupied::by 13 adults and 15 children, members of eight families. “In addition to overcrowding, our inspectors found inadequate sewage disposal facilities and insufficient lighting and ventilation,” he charged. Dr. Morgan alleged that health violations were not the only complaints against the N. Béfmont ave. house. “The fire prevention bureau has investigated the house and found fire hazards there, too,” he disclosed. Thousands of Others
“There are not hundreds but thousands of other houses in Indianapolis similarly unfit for human habitation.” At fire prevention headquarters Chief Michael J. Hyiand said he would allow the owner of the N. Belmont ave. house a “reasonable” time to comply with fire prevention ordinances. “But I'm prepared to padlock this house and others where owners fail to comply with our orders.” ‘he asserted. “The bureau's hands have been strengthened by the passage Monday right of a penalty amendment to the fire preventibn ordle nance. From now on we're going to get tough.” '
LEATHER FOR FEATHERS,
‘NEW YORK, Jan.'f1 (U.P). Hard put to find rthe real article for the bird costume worn by Papa~geno in “The Magic Flute,” Metro-}|-politanl opera costumes improvised.
in Poland, rolling forward mercilessly. fallen to Red troops driving on Lodz. Other Soviet units have smashed
3-Ply Drive Wins Weksaw; Nazis Reel All Along Front
the shattering. Red army offensive Grojec and Radom also have
surge that has reportedly placed
them at the outskirts of Czestochowa, 13 miles from the Reich. In East Prussia, the Germans admitted the loss of Schlossberg.
s
man comand said, Marshals Gregory K. Zhukov and Ivan S. Konev had thrown 90 infantry divisions and 15 tank corps into the massive sweep toward Silesia. Moscow said the winter offensive was developing with a scope and savagery unparalleled in the war between Russia and Germany, and that the Soviets were determind to slug through to. the German border as soon as possible, preliminary to the predicted push Berlin. The violence of tHe fighting In some sectors was indicated by Russian fleld dispatches saying that in the initia] battles around captured Radom and Kielce, the Red army smashed five full panzer and four infantry divisions, some units losing upward of 75 per cent of their effectives. Berlin accounts said major Russian forces also were on the attack to the north in a doublebarrelled drive to envelop and wipe out the military base of East Prussia. : Everywhere the Germans were reeling back toward their ‘frontier. A general retreat at some points was taking on the appearance of a rout. The enemy was sacrificing entire divisions in a desperate effort to slow the Russian advance long enough to permit formation of a new defense line. Elaporate fortifications that had been building since the Nazi occupation of Poland moré than five years ago collapsed in a matter of hours. . The whole Soviet front below Warsaw moved westward in giant strides. : Soviet troops . continued their house-to-house mop-up in Budapest, capturing another 120 city blocks and 3160 more ptisoners from the trapped axis garrison.
11 HURT IN CRASH OF 2 TRAINS HERE
(Continued From Page One)
senger train was going about 24 miles an hour when they collided at 4:25 a. m.
Two of the mail cars of the Chicago to Cincinnati New York Cen-
‘| tral train were derailed and jumped
about five yards from the track. A chunk about the size of a train wheel was knocked out of the passenger locomotive.
Falls Between Tracks
Mr. Ray, the freight train fireman, was knocked out of the cab of the locomotive and fell between the tracks. Both trains were headed east, pulling out of the Peoria & Eastern yards of the New York Central line when the accident’ occurred. The freight train was on its way from Kankakee, Ill, to the Hill yards in Indianapolis. After the crash’ about a foot of |b: water from the tenders stood
Sahih HE INDIANAPOLIS | TIMES _
[YANKS ADVANCE 3) TOWARD MANILA
Little Resistance Met Except in Northeast of Lin-
gayen Beachhead. (Continued From Page One)
-| correspondent in the northeasterm
sector, said enemy resistance was stiffening steadily in the area. There appeared little doubt that the Japanese would make a lastditch stand to retain control of the road running from Damortis on the southeast coast of the gulf of Lingayen to the summer capital of Baguio, 17 miles to the northeast.
Brisk Fighting Rages
Brisk fighting was raging less than 1400 yards east of Damortis,
lhe said, but the Americans were
killing at least six Japanese to
|’ [€very “Yank lost inthe northern:
sector. ; (A-Japanese Domei dispatch" said American convoys, consisting of 50 transports with escorts of cruisers and destroyers, had. been attacked heavily by Japanese planes south of Negros island in the ‘central Philippines.) Most enemy troops encountered in the frontal advance on Manila have been of poor quality, largely from labor battalions. A considerable number surrendered. None offered any organized resistance. Casualties on both sides have been very light. American losses number only a few hundred despite the stiff Japanese resistance at the northeast corner of the beachhead. The Japanese appeared to be hoarding their ‘main . forces in northern Luzon and smaller numbers in the southern part of the island until they can be used to best advantage.
Yanks Advance
In addition to driving south from Camiling, the Americans also were advancing east toward Moncada in an effort to .form a solid 12-mile front. Moncada lies 32 miles inland from the Lingayen gulf beachhead. In the north, troops opened an envelopment drive against enemy forces in the Rosario area. One unit east of the coastal town of Damortis, eight miles north of San Fabian, cut the main road in the enemy's rear three miles west of Rosario. American forces five miles south of Pozorrubio cut Luzon’s principal north-south highway for a second time at Binalonan. previously had been severed at Urdaneta, five niles farther south.
Widen Beachhead
On the western flank of the Lingayen gulf beachhead, the Amer-
icans reached Alaminos on the Bo-|,,w and post-war, is to destroy the linag peninsula 10 miles northwest nity of the allies. The advance widened |
of Port Sual. the beachhead to nearly 50 miles.
Gen. Douglas MacArthur's daily
communique said American command of the air was “complete.” Japanese airfields at Clark; Aparri| and Batangas were blasted by all| types of bombers with fighter support. Many planes caught on the] ground were destroyed and runways and ground installations damaged. The only three enemy .aircraft seen in the air were shot down. Only one American plane was lost. In mopping-up operations: on Leyte, 969 more enemy dead were counted and 12 prisoners captured.
AUTHOR IS DEAD
SANTA BARBARA, Cal, Jan. 17 (U. P.).—Hobart C. Chatfield-Tay-lor, 80, internationally-known duthor and father of Undersecretary of Commerce Wayne ChatfieldTaylor, was dead today after several months illness,
around the tracks near the locomotives. The New York Central train, No. 410, carried seven sleepers, two mail and baggage cars, two day coaches and a combination mail and smoker coach.
"Working in the derailed mail cars
were H, Hitherington of Kankakee; W. D. Dillard, Nebraska, Ill.; L. R. Day, Indianapolis; H. W. Foran and H. C. Crosley, Richmond. Mail and express packages in both cars were transferred to another. train and taken into the Union depot here. Doors of the derailed cars were sealed. Sgt. Robert Smith and his squad were the first to arrive from police headquarters. Fire
the scene and City hospital am-
bulances took the injured persons
to the hospital
The highway |
department emergency squads 7-and 14 were at
(Continued Foon Page One)
tages to be enjoyed after victory.| In the resulting atmosphere there] has, I think, developed a certain| irritability of temper which has | enabled .the purveyors of mischief | to gain a hearing. . Théy could not flourish if <ach|
healthy discipline of self-criticism ahd less prone to impute motives to the~other. “Imperialism,” for example, is a word: which has been |
reproach on both’ sides;
dignation, and feels that it is doing no more than pursuing genuine national interests in a legitimate way.
Munich. Munich was not the work of one day or of one man. Some] of “the people who have damned] Munich most contributed substan- | tially to its happening. The Daily Telegraph uttered the most serious, warning while that agreement was being negotiated; but even so there| are few newspapers and few public |
event which led up to it. Let us be’ warned, but let us also |
We, the members of the presen
sibility for seeing that we.hand on| to posterity our inheritance. of | civilizatien. We build for them a world as immune as we:can make
twice afflicted our own generation. Great Britain and America cannot play their parts in that task if they are going to fall to trivial bickering about unessentials. Honest differences will inevitably arise about the details of. policy .or. the
example, in the settlement of Poland or in the regulation of international air transport. ,Prank and responsible discussion of such differences is indeed necessary. Honest candor can do no harm. After all it is an essentially Anglo-Saxon attribute.
Warns of Propaganda
g—
which causes the trouble. Goebbels is one of Germany's chief assets. He never fails to cash in on the mischief makers on both sides of the Atlantic. There was a garbled story on this side of a horde of American businessmen, in officers’ uniform, going to Paris on _commercial business. On your side there has been the ridiculous attempts in some quarters to represent the Americans as doing all the | fighting on the Western front while {the British stood idly on the sidelines. Goebbels uses them all. He realizes as clearly as any one living that the only hope for Germany, both
fort,
a little too clever.
lus the game he is playing." | We have to recognize plainly that there are newspapers and politicians {on both sides of the Atlantic who are more concerned to print. a colorful story or pull a fast one on their opponents than to stick to the unvarnished and less interesting truth. = Democracy has to put up with these trials. In course of time,
but the interim damage is great. Foundation of Idealism
Our future relations, while based on self-preservation, must also have a foundation in idealism.” The irresponsible mischief maker -is out to destroy both. The situation in Greece has given us a violent foretaste of the vast problems which will confront us in
the restoration of a prosperous and ——————— omens Str ——
OFFICIAL WEATHER
U. 5. Weather Bureau
(All Data in Central War Time) —Jan. 17 1945—
Sunrise. ...... 8:04 | Sunset....... 5:46
Precipitation 24 hrs. end. 7:30 a. m., Total precipitation since Jan. 1 Deficiency since Jan. 1 ....,.......ee 133
The following table shows the highest temperatures. for 12 hours ending at T: 30 . m. yesterday and the lowest tempersath for 12 hours ahding at 7:30 a. am.
trace
t day: ~ High Low Atlanta .. . 40 28 Boston ..... 33 21 Ciaeinnati 30 13 Cieveland 25 11 Denver ... ... 38 27 Evans+:lle 30 28 Ft. Wayne ..........«, aN 9 Indianapolis (city) . 29 12 Kansas City Mo 29 28 Miami, Fis 5 57 Minneapolis-St. Paul .... 22 14
New Orleans New York ' Oklahoma City ... Omaha, Neb. . Pittshurgh . San Antonio, Tex. uis
Washington, D. C.
IN INDIANAPOLIS—EVENTS—VITALS
EVENTS TODAY
Indiana Women's and Children’s Apparel club, meeting, Claypool hotel. Laryngological, Rhinological and ‘Otological society, regional nvention, Indianapolis Athletic club. All-Baptist Fellowship Zion Baptist church. Ametighn go dustrial forum, dinner meets 6:45 p.m, Central Y.M. C. Ws chapter, National Association ‘of Cost Accountants, 6:30 p m., Lincoln hotel." Lions club, meeting, Claypool hotel, noon.
conference, Mt.
EVENTS TOMORROW
Indiana Women’s and Children’s Apparel club, meeting, Claypool hotel, All-Baptist, Fellowship conference, Mt. Zion Baptist church. Phi Delta Theta, lunchedn, Columbia club. Jewifh Cultural series, Kirshbaum center, 830 p. m.
MARRIAGE LICENSES
Heiser Johnston, 2030 Indianapolis; Paul ine Carson, 2608 Boies ue pl Paul George Comstoc R. 16, Box 631-D; Dolores Ann Ninire, 3138 Park. n Dardeen, Terre Haute; Dorothy
Elmer R.
dy 4
Billings, Washington Mary. Helen Whitaker, 5408
Elmer . V. “Bluth. Sagr Atterbury; Marie Martina
B, McPhetrid, 570 N. P 1 Siaays ean cPhetr! X, ers n = Sm a hg cise W
Parme, Clevelan William Huffman, 1041 Cornell; Loomis, 1915 Stieidon Robert Lee Bush, 530 N. pershing:
i 3848 Ye
N. Olney; . Oxford, Wiliams BP Camp’ Aueroury. erine wman, 1423 8. Richlan William Floyd Wilso! son, 8 N. Ri! Hatis Marie Carden, 636 Blake, Apt. 224. , Nugea, Burst, Raymond
"BIRTHS
Girls Earl, Nellie Davis, at St. Prancis. Chester, Opal Hendricks, at St. Francis. Max, June McKeeman, at St. Francis. Jack, Margie Meyers, at Bt. Prancis. Lee, Rose Baker, at City.
Ray, Lena Oliver. at Methodist. Paul, Pearl Richey, at Methodist.
Hill, Terre Haute. Harold, aus Atami, o 's. ins Jonathan Duncan Jr. Stout field; Dalter, in, at St. Vincent's, . Greene, Stout - Otis, Lacie Stiners, 7 St. Vincent's. Cleo Bverett Rigi 1420 Linden; Anna |Luke, Margaret Boazman, at 1236 College. . Lin Noah, Grace Snudnas, at = Division, + Walter Kelle ies, N. Ralph, Wilma Luke, at 1504 N Emerson. ia Ouiohine bE is Somer pred, | Idella McLin, at 817 W. 26th.
Thompson, in the Papegeno bu, Bondy. a. i will do his bird in leathier Ta od oF iit ; strips painted to He To ma
ne Cen su —- id's Fa.
Polen. at ot. Francis. A 7: rn ! or =~ Rs dl . ha
( Daviess
Ye. navy; Wanda ue i ll
Autiérs hotel; Eva Park.
: Mary King. n, at Flower Mission, t
Austin, Robertha Wathen, at City. Roy, Betty Malott, ‘at Coleman. John, Helen Parcat, at Coleman Simon, Margaret Hartsing, at Methodist. George, Marie Hosler, at Methodist. James Virginia Young, at Emhardt, Joe, Nellie Britt, at 926'2 8. Capitol. Paul Jewell Kelly. at 1132 Kentucky Ty Colma Langsford, at 521 N A whiliam, Yaary Olive, at 828 Fayette, Russell, Elsie Vorhies, at 522 E. Warsaw.
hem : DEATHS
Frank 8. Smith, 77. at 337 N. Drexel, cardio vascular renal, Asa = Kramer, 44. at Veterans, carci-
A
oy Suary, ta tuberculosis. Ethel ' Elizabeth Banks, 44, at 9717 W. 58th, carcinoma. William W. Pyatt, r 3 238 N. Belle Vieu, cardio vascular Virgil Hinton} rH is Hoache, chronic myocardit Arthur. R. a acl, 67, at 1238 Eugene,
, at B18 N. West, ine JB 64, at 217 Parkview, Fiore B Keicher, 78, at City, br8nchopneumo
s George Maloy, 49, “at ay, embolism
Sarah 'C. ‘Smock, , at “city, sclerosis
Mabel Alma Battsof, $7, at 1104 N. Ta-
, Jplma Fah 1; at Riley, cerebral Ww, pre Philpott, 83, at Methodist, xo tg a Co a
| countries in a%similar state,
|
it from such a catastrophe as has|
application of agreed principles—for |
It is the other kind of story
ri Speech Hailed As Step to Lasting Peace PAY OF MAYOR HERE
well-ordered world. It has ool the unfortunate’ Jot of the British
of the British commonwealth. alone. | It is essential for the Whole civilized {world and the responsibility is common to all the allies. If we have made serious mistakes
{in the handling of the problem--
whith I personatly do not think is.
side were more ready to adopt the [the case—that is unfortunate, but!
it is not a reflection on -our good faith. Remember Greece, like other is- no {longer merely a Balkan problem—
too frequently used as a term of | lit 18 part of the world’s problem, | yet each and what happens there can and be raised by city council in 1947, is unconscious of intentions on its does affect a world _in which dis-|
owrt part deserving any such tn- |
tance has been for practical purposes almost annihilated.
Roosevelt's Message
Everyone on this side of the { apolis.
There is still reproachful talk of | water. will, I am sure, re-echo the lcent survey of municipal personnel |
| tive city officers w
BILL WouLp: DOUBLE |= confined girs ml
{Continued From Page One)
| $600 additional for the city council | gps John ‘S. Gonas (D. South
to suspect the other of jockeying i, tackle this trouble: But the so.| President and the council finance| pend), and Robert L. Brokenbwr for economic apd political advan: ution is not-one for the advantage Chairman.
.The other house ‘meastire would provide $3000 annual Jensin for the widows of former so long as they remain v A résolution introduced by
(R. Indianapolis), called upon, the
The measure applies only to | natignal congress to pass a law
| elected officials. now on the pay of certain appoin-
affid the would be granted the right to revize these pay schedules,
Among those whose salaries are
now limited by law are the corporation counsel, $4500; city controller!
$3600; city attorney, $3600, and the
city engineer, $5200.
‘Outgrowth of Survey
The bill was sponsored by Mrs. Nelle B, Downey and Earl Tecke-
Statutory eeilings| |that would provide direct payment iby the federal government of $40
ould be canceled | o. month to needy persons over mayor and city council
60 years of age. New Bills Introduced
New bills introduced in the sen ate would: ONE: the
Increase the salary of Marion county: coroner from
| $3000 to $6000 annually and fix the All of these salaries probably will |
pay of physician deputies at not less~#an $140 per month norwmore than $200 a month. TWO: Permit all Hoosier law school graduates to begin practice
of" law without passing bar exe
| meyer, both Republicans of Indian- | aminations if they entered military
It is an outgrowth of a re-
| service before taking examinations. THREE—Give the right .to fix
wise words of President Roosevelt, | #nd wages conducted by former job salaries of deputy county surveyors
when he said in his latest message to congress that: “Peace. can be | made and kept only by the united
determination of free and peace- | loving peoples, who are willing to] the survey, instituted by eity coun
work. together—willing to help one |
{ions and feelings.”
surveyor Fred Telford,
in the 1945 budget. Many civic,
fessional organizations
It is in line| tg Marion county commissioners. with a general pay Increase for alt i business and pro-|
Other Measures
Other bills introduced in the
supported | house would:
ONE—Lo6wer the present gasoline | shrinkage lowance granted dis
The senate passed and sent to the|tributors from 3 per cent to % per
men in America or in Britain who |another—willing to respect and try house by a vote of 48 to 0 a bill au- | cent. are devoid of responsibility for the |t understand one another's opin- | | thorizing the state to donate any)
TWO-—Forbid racial discriminaes
| state land up to 300 acres to the tion in the issuance of life insurance
The spirit that should bind our|federal government for a veterans either in respect to premium pay-
think ahéad beyond the victory. | two countries is that spirit of high | | hospital. ¢{devetion
[fighting services into the single, the measure to pay its own expenses. |
intimate, invincible comradeship in| {arms we have seen in action under bills.
the supreme Eisefihiower. +
His latest efthat of his fake broadcast attributing to Montgomery all the credit for stopping Rundstedt, was Its exposure [should show the ‘most foolish among
the lies are caught up or largely so,|
no Molly a Black, 68. at 5301 E. Raymond, |
tuberpulmonary arterioPhilip Fahey, 85, at St. Vincent's, carel-
STRAUSS SAYS.:-
The house also passed its first]
«= 11'S ONE DAY
tras
It was.the first bill to be| ments or individuals approved fog to a common purpose | passed by the- senate since the ses-| insurance. alliance, bear an immense respon- { which has welded the men of our sion opened two weeks ago except
RAIL GROUP TO MEET Ladies’ auxiliary No. 393, Brothere
One passed and sent to the! hood of Locomotive Firemen and direction of Gen.|senate would require school corpo- | Engineers, will meet at 2 p. m. toe | rations to pay expenses of educat- morrow at the hall.
NEARER VICTORY
FOR SNOW SCENES AND FOR SLUSHY
GENERALLY—
A MAN NEEDS GOOD OXFORDS!
They give him protection—
they shield him against the snow
, —they fend off the moisture—
They. make life's footsteps more
comfortable—And good ‘Oxfords need not be piveThe ‘Mars Store has thers'at 5.85 and. up-—ith & paca coronation 0 ell
