Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 20 March 1945 — Page 5
), 1945 | EEAY TUESDAY, MARCH x, A RR bi WE TAS TIMES emis m— mm 0. E. 8. LUNCHEON SET | ATFiRSE
\ DATILE LOOMS Ato o Workers ‘Union Faces NATIS CANCEL 40,000 Nazis in SHI Area ; ee NER BEER LAW Post- War Test of Strength ~ ARMY LEAVES Kitled-or Captured in-Weekym a. &
: (Continyed Fioin Page One) |years has had to have man (Continued From Page One) lin its northward drive into the Sieg- No: 515, O. E. S. auxiliary. Mary | ’ jeaders and that there hasn't -been fried line. Wh } dues advanced beyond the present | my ch time to develop what is N R Ci il | the open country leading rorthward |. The Germans destroved : four) Soper and Martha McConnell Cold Preparations os disweted dasilers oe Agree to Take ‘Clamp New Rules on Civil-| "ire Ruhr basi ill assist > r ~ $1 & month—60 cents goes.to the known as “labor statesmanship.” [to the Kuhr basin, bridges across the Rhine at Mainz Fight to Courts. local union, 40 to the international.| They assert the U. A. W. is. still. jans td Restore Order. | Fea dispatches sad. the bridge-|,5 patton’s forces approached the | But a rallying cry of early UA. W.l too close to the guerrilla warfare| - Dea now measured 191; miles wide city. The destruction deprived the | days was that it was to be a low-|and head-smashing of earlier days.| » (Continued From Page One) along the river bank and extended | Gormans west of the Rhine of one cost union, not like higher-priced | Politics in the local union is, in > {inland as much as eight miles. of their main escape routes across! officially question the new law's A. F. of L. unions. The story stuck. some cases, a factor in unrest. their jobs to seek refuge in cen-| At least 10 towns in the bridge-| , . ricer : constitutionality. |Now the membership refuses toiUnion leaders must stand for elec- | tra! Germany. \head area were captured overnight. “This law will have the effect of |hoost the monthly kick-in. | tion each year, and testimony given | German soldiers have “lost touch” |including Eudenbach, 2's miles east throwing the licensing of beer dis-| The U. A. W.'s membership peak the senate war investigating com- with their units or commanding | {of the Rhine-Ruhr-Berlin super-| Lt. Gen. Alexander M. Patch’s tributors from one party to another|__j 236 580—was reached a year ago. | mittee was that’ union officers must |officers through “enemy action,” D.! highway. {north - bound 7th army ripped | and from one faction to another,’ The average for June-December, spend a- lot %f their ‘time election- N- B. added in a remarkably frank | The 1st army seized a big fighter- | through the Siegfried line at a sald the association in a prepared|ig944, was 1,008,159—a sizable ‘drop. | | eering if they Want to stay in of«| broadcast explaining thedrastic new | plane strip near Eudenbach and ex-|dozen. points on the 50-mile front| statement issued ‘by its secretary, Much U. A. W. membership is in| |fice. ‘The morality rate in union regulations. tended its hold on the military high- from Saarbruecken to the Rhine | Pleas Greenlee, < aircraft production, and a sharp) | politics is fairly high. | In order to reintegrate all Ger- | way to more than 7'2 miles. jand cleared the Nazis from their | Automatic cancellation of beer act war decline is expected. Many | Saipe Kind of Politics [mans into the defensive battle of | From 40 to 45 German towns were last foothold on French soil. wholesaler permits without a hear-|foresee total membership stabilizing | : ait |the Reich, D. N. B. said, the gov- | captured or by-passed by Patton's ; ing was termed “unconstitutional” at ahout 600,000. Union politics is vulnerable t0|gpnment had decreed: {racing ‘columns yesterday. A dozen By UNITED PRESS the same kind of demagoguery that, ONE—Military leave will be or more were taken by the 7th army A BBC broadcast heard by the
on grounds that it denies individu-| ynheome for the June-December | als “due process of law and equal period averaged $541,000 — but! | comes into natioifal political life. | granted only in cases of illness or United Press in New York said
Prootan of the laws under the monthly expenses were $542,000. If The “ins” can be attacked for not special gslanuy, out ed SOLDIER INJURED IN | American 3d and 7th army forces constitution.’ |membership should go to 600,000, it | being tough enough with I TWO-sMen, from pin Poe if X { ue reported 16 have linked up territories no longer wi an undisclosed point in the
oat ay: § Seine emia! of Souk would cost the U. A. W. interna-| ment, getting wages, hours or work=| o vag. Palatinate = organized Alcoholic ‘Beverage com- yonalo a, ne mont ing conditions improved or fighting | (It was not clear immediately | SAFETY LONE CRASH == RAF ainime : 3 ’ mission was Sssailéd onthe same | inl OTEShIZIng ali 9 narder ‘for settlement of grievances|gyether this meant that German| i po oo irceon, stationed at| The Germans still were fig entire] Pepsi-Cola Company, Long Island City, N.Y. theory. sharply. Li favor of ution members, refugees from occupied countries e la savage delaying action on the nol PF ranchised Bottler: ~ Pepsi- C ola Bottling Co. of Indpls. “The wholesalers feel,” continued| Busi the size alone doesn't make. Grievance settlement is almost \would be called into the army, a field, is in Billings hospital | I a A re ese ar the statement, “that having con- Boing Sesh en young industry itself, aecording to! that foreign slave workers in Ger-| with a dislocated hip and broken | op the Nazi disaster ap fed pe : : ; | dusted a Mgitimaie ugiriess Involv- | ink that consolidating their now| Shine Sheen ne Tatars Some|many will be forced into ‘military leg received when driving rain and | hinge on how swiftly eas es xy for the Lovely Easter Bride . .. ng investment, the affect of th > A y Rg 14 is » destroy such nba , Hires would make the spend all or most of their time on |" THREE—AI persons - who left Es a ji ne ig ae a har atuviny $19vHnY : without hearing or legal recourse:|parooinino ore sold I point of | grievances and relatively little on|tpheir places of residence since Jan- |hit a safety zone at 720 Massa- ik UD Wilh Paich Sivigons, i ee Sad Q They feel that all licensing respect-| pa most Stor ln ¥ ie Inqusyey. | production |uary, 1945, must register at once] chusetts ave. last night. armoved pi om os i Ehons fond 2 ing other businesses controlled by the ype 11 A Ww. oe at port oe The U. A. W. has been going in| | with police of the new places of| Face cuts by broken glass were! NmES Were a) i R ahizy Net hl) DIAMOND RINGS state under its police powers could | ogg Thats onl ya ou hi 25,-| for some of the activities that go| residence. |received by occupants of cars driven | enter of th oy « i rough 8 5, ; . be subjected to similar arbitrary ape. nos a at ou 70 el with what is sometimes considered | FOUR—AIl men of 16 to 60 not|by James H. Douglas, 2430 Paris), eaténing Ore . tinate, L ay k From Ioefiane pol Authorized action.” any severe or Haclonued o against tne second phase of unionism—the|yet called up must register at once 3Ve. and Noble Berge, Greenwood, | mile Tals Tr 0 cut the 1 BLE ON : . Keepsake Jeweler Greenlee Action May 1 : ged attack. | first stage being the unceasing drive |gt any army district office. when they collided at Delaware and | | Hombure. and Ka an through : ‘ \ The “5 conctationis docifion” to. gb No Fat Salaries {for higher wages, shorter hours, FIVE—Anyone with knowledge of | Vermont sts. Riding with them | oi # iserslautern to the The men running the U. A. W.| | better working conditions | persons suspected of evading mili- | Were Eileen Heatock, 1906 Boule- | 1 "3d vs Hh : “all out” against the new liquor code | don't get any fat salaries, com- | This other part of the U. A, W./tary or labor service must notify vard pl,” and Violet Greene, i PA $10 stored Sve ght slast 10re . than
apparently sidetracksd previous in-!pared either with salaries in other program includes programs for the police. Engushave. : Mrs. Margaret Moore, 30 N.] 10 miles southeastward to within miles northwest of Kaisers-
tentions, on the part qf some of its unions or of men in industry against | health, recreation, consumer advice SIX--Persons who fail to regis | four officers, to convert it into a G. O. P.- |whom they are pitted in bargain- |and so on ter will be treated as deserters. Colorado ave. is in City hospital | ly Gooronneed by flavored agency | ne; | ‘The union has bought the. old| Another D. N. B. dispatch said|With chest injuries received whe) | Patton's. 11ih armored divis Seis Final AcUOn--on Mr. Greenlee's. President R. J. Thomas gets|Edsel Ford home, for example, and | Adolf Hitler had received Reich] the car in which she was riding and| aid. a bla rod orec vision ; $0000 a year. Secretary-Treasurer has converted it to a health insti-' Youth Leader Arthur Axmann and °"® driven by Dorothy Weaver, cked-out armored force . submitted resignation will be taken| gc * oul. SCORES IS Sor members. To Laer Ar ea min Shelbyville, collided at New York |8ls0 were riding down on Kaisers- Other Splendid on May 3, dat Greenies 8 the Jor dents Walter ‘Reuther and Richard | But there's not much chance of members who had distinguished | st..and Sherman dr. site from ibe north and north- | Diamond Values Tey Polsonape secretary ol ex-UOV-|puankensteen $7000 each and 18 re-|the more militant phase” of union | themselves in fighting. | Shirley Hale, 216 W. Hampton dr. | es 2. besakherk Shes) iwi of : at $29.75 ; ” ° nt poe Local Republican forces have gional directors $5000 each. |operations being made No. 2 on the! “I am firmly convinced. that in told police her ,automobile, which |, Merzwoiler: 19 . ? Pp to $2500.00 . ig [ People here who are friendly to|program. Few people out here|this struggle we will emerge vic- was parked in front of her home, , miles north- £ ey hill
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(Continued From Page One)
Advancing. on 50-Mile Front
Oe sire i Jue Cuaties oe unions and know their affairs|think the era of labor-management |torious, particularly thanks to the had been hit by a car driven by two [Lorine of Kelseislavtters, dosing i; i E T 4 d! | well say th »| soldiers who did not stop. Polic some < rmans. as! erms Arranged! chairman, into the beer wholesaler y the U.-A. W. in its first|confliet is very near an end. [Sern Youu, and you, my boys, p °| One column of the 11th armored y
{later arrested the soldiers nd | secretaryship. 1 A Tok : f | turned them .over to ailitary| division stormed into Rockenhau- : oD. major takers of thel S #4 Dri k S | Shri k | A Tokyo version of the same| | authorities. [sen, 13 miles northwest of Kaiserpolitical “conversion” idea, Rudy oO rin upp y rFINKS speech said Hitler went on to admit| | slautern, early today, while units of { that the war had reached a ‘serious | he unidentified tank force closed | 103 N. iA &
Heintzelman, the association's presi- | tate of aff dent, was absent yesterday. ! A S R ti A C 's afairs. SWITCHMAN INJURED the enemy communications cen-| S ugar a ons re ui The your ges: member of Ute dele. ter in three columns, cutting west- | Across the Street From Terminal Station
Democratic wholesalers at the! | gation, D. N. B. said, was a 12-year- \ward across the path of the 11th.
session protested that “Democrats | built the beer and liquor business”| (Continued From Page One) for us,” the Royal Crown executive old boy who had received the iron IN FALL FROM TRAIN ons cone ——————————"r and natuarally should have the! . He id. | cross of second class for saving the ps lives of 12 wounded German soldiers| 2 ~~ a aia .
facturers at 70 per cent but cull Ng Hurst, president of a sugar| Thomas Marker, a switchman for!
privilege of reaping the profits. the bottlers” They also viewed with alarm Re- “°C °° RIS. | brokerage firm, said he felt the and causing the arrest of a Russian the B. & O. railroad, was injured publican attempts to squeeze into| James Gwilyn, office manager of situation was unfortunate. Lend- SPY in the Oppeln area of Silesia. critically today when he fell from
the trade in small counties, One the Royal Crown Cola Bottling Co. lease and the armed forces are get-| Allies Warn German Workers a freight car at the B. & O. tracks wholesaler said six republican, said: {ting more, he -asserted. Conse-| Meantime, allied radios broadcast and Keystone ave. He is in St.|
politicos were trying to “get ‘into| “Even if we could get the sugar, quently there is less for the civilian | Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower's fourth | Vincent's hospital. An engine, Operated by John]
the business” in one county which 'I don't know what we'd do about population. food | warning to German civilians and 1awson 135 N. Miley ave., was go-
had but 10 beer outlets. {the bottles, cases and help. | “Both the OPA and war “Also, if the war manpower com- | administration have done a fine] workers in the Frankfurt-on-Main/ing west on the tracks, pulling two|
| mission sets our employment limit! job,” Mr, Hurst said. and Mannheim-Ludwigshafen areas; freight cars. |
HUGE TOKYO AREA {as of March 1, or some such date,] Which still leaves Mr. AVETage (, leave their homes and factories! Mr. Marker, who is 59 and lives at 2328 Broadway, was standing on
{ we'll suffer. This is an off- month Man underst: anding hat thirsty diately.” emer: | “iE IALRIY." top of one of the freight cars.
IN RUINS, JAPS SAY The warning was addressed espe- When he applied the brakes after Yank Fleet Prowls Pacific i In cially to arms workers. They were the cars were released from the lo-| {Continued From Page One) ltold not to move into other in-|comotive, he lost his balance and dustrial areas where they would be | fell.
higher, and the tower of the parlia- | subject to the labor draft, but to| black | Search of Jap Navy’ S Hideout fe the country and on| NAME SPEAKERS FOR
ment ' buildings stuck out
against the background ‘of a red | the farm. eg | (Continved From Page Onn) ‘Iquaking Japanese canceled all but| The whole Prankfurt-Mannheim- TEACHER’S MEETING
sky. “The city was as bright as at one express train service to a = : ill be biect hiding ‘places ken by--B-29 Supirs | Ludwigshafen area wi subje: Ne evacuation of refugees from burned- ya “merciless” bombardment.” | Harold A. Anderson and Mark | Neville, president and second vice|
oke, Sse, Fs 5 Bhs, SO A esas out sections of Tokyo -and-other| o.oo Fo 4 German radio] over the city. During ‘the night Discussing the latest strike on|jarge cities. |president of the National Council Japan by carrier planes, he sai¢ ER SaTUhO ai stations tried to blot out the broadwe thought the whole of Tokyo had! The express service retained was of English teachers, will speak at | b duced to ashes. | that no reports had been received "thay from, Tokyo to Shimonoseki, | |casts with furious jamming. a meeting: of the Indiana é | een reduce ashe here of the damage inflicted on I homeland| Swedish reports that masses of | a counc ‘Safeguards Save City’ connecting the Japanese homelan oh t of th at Technical high school. Satur- | aleg y | the enemy or of damage to -our and the Chinese continent. refugees. were streaming out o e | | day. Yet in the “morning when most | { forces, if any. = | Another broadcast revealed that three cities indicated that the Mr. Anderson will speak on plies “of the fires had been brought un- | “But we think that~we- probably the huge infhux-of-evacuees. into the ctr already was heving its| Function of the English Instruc-| _der control and pale blue smoke 690 some pretty good results,” heloutlying sections of Japan
| forced authorities to abandon most [WV “ " imeem it . was rising over the streets and | Ir. Neville’s address will be Att- | - smouldering * ruins, one could real- | % Reavy Aula) Blows : {of he Eaveramentsl regulations ror CHARLES D. HAAG, 1H, |tudes Toward Reading—the Pro- | . : : ize the good effects of the measures! eanwhile, the American carrier feeding the reiugees cedures and underlying Philos- |} g > oy vay - 4 , adopted earlier to guard against | fleet, which pounded Japan for two! As a result, food supplies will be! GLASS WORKER, DIES ophy.” SOW VY ONNEGUT’S GRASS SEED days, apparently broke off its assault | distributed immediately to alll Charles Daniel Haag, 2118 Wood- rt ————————
fire.” : temporarily today. evacuees even those without proper j,wn ave. died yesterday in St. Vin- CADET KEITH KINSEY
|. The . lcreasingly heavy. ' aeriay#ir raid victim identificatiog- cards : i = : blows on Japan together®with new ~ Tokyo also reiterated its-fears-gf eent's fospital. Heyyus 67, . ™ HOME ON. FURLOUGH You are sure of a blend of fine grasses, selected for their ease of growth,
‘an. gains in ‘the Philippines an American ihvasion of China or A resident of Indianapbiis ‘ American. gains in pp Aviation Cadet Keith - Charles beauty and permanence, under local conditions. Because of super-refin-
» Fast relief for brought further repercussions in an inland a*tack by ¢ Fhinese troops, years, IM d : 3 Tokyo. but picked up the old propaganda pairmount Glass Works and insey, son of Mr. and Mrs. Wil- Li common headaches! E+ broadeasts Indicated grow. | ine: that the Japanese were only| =r "Ch pi ocneet Masonic. lodge liam H. Roberts, 4832 Carvel ave, ing, you are sure, too, of high purity and germination, ‘with chaff and” ing signs of widespread confusion Swaine 3 hance to smash: any No. 714. i deheing a 15-day Tarlough 'v with '§ : weeds removed. | among Japanese officials. anding atlempt. Survivors are his wie, Della; a ; Don't let an ordinary headache | In Burma, British troops cap- . Me recently received his gun- | Kyushu Is Target son, Francis of Detroit, Mich. ,! rand 'ner's wings at Tyndall field, Fla.
spoil your work or your fun. Do tured Mogok, site of the world’s E dchild Radio Tokyo reported there were _| five grandchildren. > largest ruby mines 65 miles north Services will ‘be -held-at-3-p.-m He will report to Moody field, Ga.,
as millions do—take genuine f a no further attacks on Japan Since ..ct of Mandalay. They also were Thursday in the residence Bur- for advanced bombardier® training. | . .
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thalitiuunnnun I i CR TT EEO AR RATER EEE EEE EOE EEL EERE EERE RRO R EERE SAR RAE LEAR RR
he was an employee of the
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be prepared to rout your next : : headache in a remarkable hurry! the capital city of lollo, Meanwhile, Col. Robinson Hitch- | A native of Peace Dale, R. I.| colds from devel- ’ r. she was the author of many books | Sping if used in fAreworors ” f imately 52.lb. bag..
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trace of unpleasant reaction.
Bombers Busy cock-state selective service directo
Panay, a 4611-square-mile island | gajd Tndiana must provide 18,000 directions in in the Visaya group, and tiny Mala-| men for the armed forces by July | In Fecent Jeu she wn es Works fine! distress |naui island off southern Mindanao, and “can't afford to loosen its farm | summers at Peace Dale and winters | were the 25th and 26th islands In-|draft policies.” |at_her California home. ~ VICKS VA: TRO- NOL vaded by American forces in hel “For every farmer we don't take, | ee——
Philippines. ill have to tak an up to | we will have to take a man up : 3 A this vear!
American bombers again carried | {38 years old from the ranks of
out extensive raids from Borneo to|egsential war workers, or a man ’ Formosa,” hitting the latter island| with a family,” he said. {fortress for the sixth successive day | 1n Marion, Draft Board Chair- VIGORO, 4-12-14 . In their homeland, the bomb-|man 1, Emory Carter, acknowledged ri, For 1 4 nd. shyul wernt ——— or lawns, trees and shrubs
the situation is still simmering there following formation of a| 10-1b. bag farm “grievance committee.” He | : { said citizens seem to have paired | {off into two factions: . ‘ “The two groups are those who Corre i is welcome at any hour! Coffee adds zest to ~ AGRICO, 6-10-14 | already have sons in the service any-octasion! Hot, satisfying, delicious=no wonder Ji ae : and those who don't,” he assetted.! it's Ametica’s all-time favorite! A special formula for grass and Hassil Schenck, president of the : , flowers, 10-1b. bag ....80¢
Indiana Farm Bureau, said the! | farm labor problem was the knot- |
ents formulated over 50 joss Sih | tiest in_Hoosler history. @ther au- | : | : PACKAGE SEEDS
Uuodaiud of study coated, pin Betsuss Weakened { Lask | thorities promised an influx of $ have akened trom Lao | foreign hired hands, including na- ; . : : Full li fF Vl f N ull line of Ferry-Morse flower
«eo i” millions of NRg o 254 boctoday of [rd Iron due fo “Periodic Losses” tives of Mexico, Barbadoes and Ja- : : ; | ; — , and vegetable seeds, from Se
Er Lo | gine
periodic periods that you are pa 8 | we rower rouostow amen | fiioed ves cppiont | [od 1 JW 4S So start ' ; ,
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