Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 27 March 1945 — Page 9
21, 1045
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Cenfer
d Here
> g directly to [.” loans, vet- * L to a new Center” to be e World War
war, who had before going ct the ceriter, by the banks. veteran will the applica=~ i through the tion and the . provided the yank he wants
es was chair polis Clearing vhich devised janapolis and ks have been le. A similar inctioning in
> AND HIPS
N. DeQuincy sk | Johnson, 1208 N, | datrick, 2858 N.
Bervice, 305 Mere s and brokerage, | } McCrea st. 1 Co., 200 Krpsge /alter L. Florey, + A. Powell, oi | ora, 4049 College. { , 546 8. Meridian ete, Clay Bush Mae Bush, 2234
9 Madison ave, C. B. Kendall, Vv
nance & Supply ! ator repairs and J 1, Carmel,
{ i ! | i i § i
ATIONS |
[ammond; dway, Gary, wis Simon,
change © and § same J
tland; dissolution, \. C. Horn Corp, admitted to Ine 8 remedial watere
Co., Inc, Hame ging the corpore § ‘rinting Co., Ine, | Dealers associa« mange of agent te § th st, Mishawaka, § Employees Credit dment Increasing § shares of 85 par §
san ———
ES 1944
ES |
rr
rich LC Definitions-Givenfor Some... new Key Words Used in the Novis
What 1s)
TUESDAY, MARCH. 27, 1945
or oo « THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
. Ss
Words in the news: cartel? Or Dumbarton Oaks? The war has brought a flood of terms which few can define easily. Here in simple terms is the mean=ing of several words and phrases that probably will continue to be found in news stories: Act of Chapultepec . (cha pool ta | pek) —Agreement signed in Chapultepec palace, Mexico City, March 3, 1945, by United States and all South {American natiQps except Argentina to declare war against any Ameri can nation that threatens a neighbor. Atlantic Charter—An eight-point memorandum signed by Roosevelt and Churchill outlining allied war aims. Bretton Woods—A summer resort town in New Hampshire where a [great financial conference was held lin the spring of 1944. The name has been attached to the ireached there, | Cartels—'Trade
flavor for
agreements
(tries, usually to maintain {above competitive figures. {ern boundary. running south the Carpathian countains.
| new frontier with Poland.
| ams a WB SION | CO
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Open Saturday Until 8 P. M.—Monday Until 8:45 P. M.
| | | | {
been
agreement
be- passed an {tween firms of two or more coun-|000,000 for the aid of any country prices whose
Curzon Line—Poland’s new east-|the US. Lord Curzon of | Mandate—An agreement. by a | England, in 1919, proposed’ a line group of nations under which one from Grodno west! of them is named to govern a na-| lof Brest Litovsk, west of Lwow to [tion outside of the group. This | line is demartied by Russia as its|the
| special
the Bretton woods conference to
cp RTH ne Ee on
Dumbarton Oaks—An old -colon{ial house in Washington, D. C., ‘where a conference was held in 1944 that outlined proposals for a world organizatien to keep the peace by force, if necessary, Export-Import Bank —-A hank created by congress to provide financial assistance with public funds to firms. and persons in this and foreign countries to increase foreign trade, Fascism—A political party organs 1zed in Italy to combat radicalism. It was later taken over by Mussolini and became a dictatorship. Four Freedoms—(]) of speech. (2rtof religion. (3) from. want. (4) from fear. Good Neighbor Policy—President Roosevelt © early in : his = first term declared the U. 8S. would live at peace like good neighbors with all the nations of the western, hemisphere. | Lend-Lease — Congress
in 1941 | appropriation of $700,-
defense ‘the President deemed essential to the defense of
Nazism — A term initials of Hitler's political] party, the National Socialistiche| Deutscher Arbeiter Partei, a dicta-| torshfp based on the belief that the state owns the citizen, Power Politics — The man-!
derived from
planes. Here he gives the sign of field. Sgt. Mervar served overseas command squadron,
T. Sgt. Anthony L. Mervar, home on furlough after 18 months overseas ‘duty in the Southwest Pacifie, just can't keep away from
victory under a C-47 plane at Stout as a crew chief with a troop carrier
He lives at 1236 N. Holmes ave.
euvers of great nations to form alliances for their own selfish in-| terests. Reichswehr—The regular German arm or] Reparations in Kind— Payment, of war damages in commodities or services instead of in money, Siegfried Line—Part of a triplej German defense system west of the Rhine from The Netherlands ore | to Switzerland. ; S. 8. (Schutz Staffel) —Himmler’s 2 army. In © general, the] toughest, most ruthless of the Ger- | man soldiers. | Storm Troopers—The military or-| : | ganization of the Nazi party. Now| w almost extinct. | t- U.N. R. RB. A.—United Nations {Relief and Rehabilitation administration, formed by 44 nations meeting in WasHington, D. C., in November, 1943, to administer relief to reconquered nations. Volkssturm—German army similar to our home guard. World Bank—A bank proposed at
Brothers on Both - Sides of World |
EDWARD A. SLAUGHTER, petty officer 2-c¢, husband of Mrs, Gladys Slaughter, 1314 E. Ray-
mond st, and son: of Mrs. Stella Slaughter, 126 W. 12th st., has met his two brothers on opposite sides of the world. A member of the seabees, he met his brother, Sgt. Arthur Slaughter, at the Red Cross
E. Slaughter | in Glasgow, Scotland. After tak-
ing part in the invasion of France, he was sent home on a short leave and left Feb. 24, 10945, for Hawaii. There, he and his brother, Woodrow, seaman 2-c in the coast guard, met while they were on the way to supper.
help the growth of trade.
international
Ernie Pyle's Work Studied as. Kind of Super Propaganda
By GERALD W. JOHNSON (Reprinted from The Key Reporter, Phi ’ Beta Kappa magazine),
Some day an ingenious candidate 'aCtics. : : for the Ph.D. degree is going to But the plain fighting man, -inobtain vast entertainment: and per. | cluding ‘officers from, say, major haps rénown from ,a study of Ernie{down, he frankly, honestly and utPyle as a stylist. - . terlv adores: fe As ‘a propagandist he already |, Atte, they adore im in n Te: engages the serious study of the ex=| a man Kolized by the perts, for his ability to move bqth|2'™¥ Is inevitably a powerful man the minds and the emotions of his | In the country. No, it Is just as readers is too obvious-to be over- [A that he is not a candidate. looked. No politician in active prac-| 10 Stylist, however, has been Sse but would give his right hand Prelty generally ignored, ‘probably or-Pyle's “ABIIY 5 neh THE Vorers because he can be by no means so in any direction that he chooses to| €asily explained. “Consider, for extake: | ample, Brave Men, which is merely As a propagandist, Pyle 1s Trela-12 continuation of This Is Your War. tively ekplained. He is a man who Simple Language (believes with passionate intensity in| It is written in the same decepthe cause of advocates, which is the|tively simple, almost naive lancause of the common soldier. Pyle guage. It almost arouses pity for a never has been able to bump up any well-meaning man so obviously out
great interest in generals and admirals and still less in strategy and
‘
Beer has been a. factor in American life from the earliest Colonial days. For four generations Wiedemani's has been the favorite beer of countless thousands. Brewed 4nd agedaccording to the original formula, Wiedemann's beer is always uniform in flavor — urifailingly refreshing in the intervals of relaxation from the weariness and anxieties of wartime,
Call for Wiedemann's by name
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Copyright 1943, The G46. Wisdemann Brewing Co., Inc.
Pistributed by
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Writing in their Journal, the PilZrim Fathers tell us that they landed the Mayflower at Plymouth Rock because they could not take the time 10 find a more favorable port, their provisions being ex bausted — "especially our beer”
1. THE CAPITAL CITY SUPPLY QO.
jot his depth in trying to write of [great events—simple to the point
| as crude, terse, austere.
It is only later—if at all—that one begins to realize how the thing hit with an impact that Flaubert never achieved, unravelled intricate psycological states with a deftness not unworthy of Proust, painted a mental image with an exactness that would have delighted Pater. How does he do it? If I knew, I might go out for that Ph.D. myself. All I know is that it happens and that it makes Brave Men more than a fine piece of war reporting. It is also a work worth the careful consideration of the academicians. I doubt that Ernie Pyle himself has the faintest idea of how he achieves his effects; but I am persuaded that those effects are not achieved by accident. Long years of patienf struggle with the language are behind them; years of reporting and trying to make the reports true in a larger sense than factually accurate.
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| where one is tempted to describe it|
CIVIC CLUBS ANNUAL MEETING SET FRIDAY
The annual meeting of the Indianapolis Federation of Community Civic Clubs, Inc. will be held at 8 p. m. Friday in the "Washington | hotel.
and recommendations made to the Indianapolis Railways will be held. Four new directors will be elected for terms of three years each John F. White, former president, will be memorialized by E. O. Snethen, H. A.,.Campbell and others.
at the meeting.
AUXILIARY TO MEET Broad Ripple auxiliary 315, O. E. S., will meet at 10 a. m. Wednesday lin Broad Ripple Masonic temple to {sew for the Red Cross. There will be a covered dish luncheon at noon and a hobby showin the afternoon.
: | Mrs. Lola Dickinson ‘will be in:|
A general discussion of the survey!
Paul Wetter, president, will officiate
Planes Lue Sergeant on Furlough _ GOLDEN RULE 0.E. S$. Stock: of Easter Flowers “Are Lowest-in-Many Yedrs
{
HE SEAT OFFICERS
CHICAGO, March’ 27 (U, P).— stalled as worthy matron and Oscar Milady’s corsage will be harder tof [Dickinson .as - worthy patron of 8€Y and more expensivé this Eas-
: (ter, florists said today, but supplies Golden Rule chapter No. 143, O. E.{ 0 1,);0¢ probably will. be the great-
|S, at public installation of officers est since Japanese shipments were {at 8 p. m. Friday at Masonic temple.| cut off in. 1941, Other officers to be installed will] Robert H. Roland, executive secbe Mrs. Viola Lindholm, association |TetarY of the Society of American|
. 4 Florists, said the stocks of cut| | matron. Fred Uhl, associate patron; |e wers throughout the nation were | Minnie Boemler, Alice |"
“lower than any war year—and| Goo#inight,
econductress;
secretary; treasurer;
ison, Lucille Hall, as-|for the business.”
|sociate conductress; Ruth Rankin,| “The florists are faced with a (chaplain: Sarah “Frances Austin, |dearth of their product plus what marshal; Dorris Coleman, Adah;|Mmight be the greatest demand,”
Ola Bishop, Ruth: Gertrude Gri he said, fith, Esther; Naomi Miller, Martha; i The best part of the Easter floral Velma Woerner, Electa; Maryevelyn | picture, Roland said, was the lily Pond, warder, and Ethel sentinel, lent on Japanese bulb trade before | Installing officer will be Mrs. the war, Hazel Berry, installing worthy | “Since, cut { matron, with Oscar Dickinson, Mrs, shipments, {Ruth Hassler, Mrs, Lucille Hall,jour efforts to produce our own
off from Japanese |
{Mrs. Hazel Uhl and Mrs, Mamie bulbs,” he said, “and because. of Passmore, as assistants Herbert {good research and cultivation we Rennard and Mrs, Florence Lehr will have 30 to 35 per cent of pre-
will be soloists. lwar lily supplies.”
Gladys Iver-|probably the lowest ever on hand |
Shields, | market, which was entirely aver
we have concentrated |
PAGE |
The average ‘yearly Japdness |SpAen! was approximately 20, 000,000 bulbs. - However, American . supplies raised in the Pacific north« west, Louisiana and Plorida have | produced a flower “with which the | Japanese couldn't compete,” Roland aid. | He gave the following reasons for |the flower shortage: 1. Scarcity of manpower, 2. Unreasonably warm spring weather which put 25 to 30 per cent of the Easter flowers on the mare , ket a’ week in advance. 3. A general shift in all greens houses to 12 to 15 per cent veges | table gardening as a .victory measure. The greatest supply problem ‘of
|
the industry, however, will be meet. —
ing the demands of overseas services men. Roland said a total of more than 1,500,000 orders from overseas had been filled during the last three years and approximately 230,000 | were expected for the coming week end alone,
fener ey -
Finest
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and de
its gre wealth With
and w
largest
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New Mexico, land of golden sun
ing places” with the development of
have been developed in the Rio Grande and Blue Water Districts,
which are in process of development in other areas, vegetables, alfalfa, cotton, and fruits are growing in ‘abundance in many parts of the state. Its potash mines are among the
zinc have long contributed to the
© SANTA FE SYSTEM LINES
ep blue skies, is swiftly “go-
at agricultural facilities and of natural resources. the conservation plans which
fine cattle and sheep. Santa Fe is proud to have
ith the conservation plans
tion improvements Santa Fe
in the world. Its copper and
ernized farms and justly of our Nation. Its pumice,
‘Serving the West and’ Southwest
smn EBB SARE SANTA TE LL ——
A
fluorspar, catbon dioxide and newly v discovered deposits of other minerals are rapidly being developed. On its ranches are millions of
“grown up” with New Mexico and to have had a share in its development. ¥ The new traffic controls, increased yard facilities, and other transporta-
cently installed in New Mexico to speed up war shipments, will help speed to postwar markets the everincreasing volumes from the mod- ; “
mines of this “Land of Enchantment.”
has re-
famous
