Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 4 June 1945 — Page 6

SG din THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

3 25

. YOUR VICTORY GARDEN i By Henry L. Pree GROWTH OF WITT G.l. RIGHTS . . By Douglas Larsen

Aristocratic Cauliflower hind IS REPORTED Reserve Arriy Officers Hold

7 “Requires Rich, Loamy Soll

Caulifiower should ‘be grown in a rich, loamy. soil, well limed Lo Christ, Scienitst, in Boston today WASHINGTON, June 4—Here| 'Q. How long do reserve comsupplied with hunius, Caulifiower is a rather exacting vegetable mtd that the membership of the Mother |, ancwers to some of the many; FUSSIGRS last? unless certain precautions are taken, it is apt to be a failure. The} church is four times greater than | questions concerning reserve com-| ° A Eligible men will be offered home gardener should purchase well-grown plants and put them 24 35. vears Ago. | missions for officers: an appointment in the officers’ |

inches apart in rows 30 inches apart. Under ideal growing conditions, The meeting elected Mrs. Myrtle, Q. I am a captain in the army, {reserve corps for an inifial period

most varieties will mature in 95 days from seed or 55 to 65 days from 11 (of five years. -— S . 0 be discharged, but want the time plants are set out. a Holin Smith of Waban, Mass, presi 'T will soon be g My. husband ‘was taken out

he officers’ ~ reserve! ans Het 1. pounds dent of the Mother church for the ‘to stay -in t A cup of liquid fertilizer, or trans- mead 1% pounds dent : lcorps. What rank will I be able planting solution, poured about each. Danish Giant, a medium| ensuing year to succeed Paul Stark to keep? : : roduc 2! sounds ’ ; ; each plant when Snowball, produces « 2’: F Seelev. Also, tribute was paid to getting, - will in- meaty heads; while Danish Perfec- | A. The highest temporary rank| though he really wanted to stay in| : : i \ ted along sure a continuous tio, a late Snowball, plan root development. with the other two, will give you a ministers who are “bringing com-| will be offered in the officers’ re- stand the plant where he is workCaulifiower must succession of harvest, Burpee's-Dry | fort, healing and spiritual strength” serve corps to all qualified: officers ing will soon finish its last conbe kept growing Weather {s popular in Eastern|to thousands of men and women in| holding commissions in the army. tract. Will my husband be able to| continuously, oth- states because it is quite’ drought-|the armed, forces. | Q. Does the provision of grant-|come home without going back into erwise “the head \ resistant, and will, produce heads| In ee is he COUrageoUS | ino the highest attained rank to! the army? ; | i : le of Great Britain against : ~ will not develop i when other varieties fail Another pes ie Marin. N hi officers who ® are not on active] A. Your husband will ‘he re-| perfectly. tavorite in Eastern markets is Im- g oe ; a] duty apply to Teguiar army offi- quired to return.to the army on Moisture. is proved - Holland Erfurt, with flat, after the time when she stood alone ers? most essentialt hard and compact heads that, weigh in her armed esistance, a of A No. and. water must two ‘to three pounds each. those who held on in other lands, : be supplied when- aristocrat of (he |the directors stated: “Their conse- Q. What determines > supp aien Cauliflower, the are eligible for a

| you ever the ground begins to dry oul. ye.oeiable garden, is most desirable | crated prayers and unceasing efforts OS Wi Liter the War? | A grass, straw or similar mule h| when the heads are bleached to a have been rewarded with a glorious {

about the plants will conserve mois-| ch owy' white by shading from the victory. | A. To be eligible for a reserve

ture and keep down the weeds Dis- sun. during the last few days of The trustees of turbance of the rcots from too close their development. This process Science Publishing society reported | | sically qualified for general or tiation services at 8 p. cultivation and alternate drying requires five to seven days during the most active year in the society's Jimited service and must have a day in the Southport ole Mrs. 1 will in | history measured in terms of cir-| record of satisfactory and honer-| Florence Wright is worthy matron

of the army last year to go to work

weigh about {in a war plant. He was a specialist,

active duty until he qualifies un-

whether men for a discharge. reserve me PLAN O. E. S. MEMORIAL

Henry Pree

heir Ranks When: Inactive

in his line and badly: needed al-|

the faithful chaplains and wartime | held upon relief from active duty {pe army and go overseas. I under-|

the Christian! commission, a man must be” “phy- will hold" both Memorial and ini-|

HINT SHORTAGE OF MEAT FOR SOLDIERS

. WASHINGTON, June 4 (U.P) — Rep. Clarence Brown (R, O.) today asked ‘army chief Gen, George C. | Marshall to investigate a reported shortage of fresh meat for Ameri{can soldiers in the Philippines. Brown wrote Marshall that ‘als lhogh civilians in Manila have plenty of fresh meat, he has been informed that soldiers have been forced to rel¥ upon “their ‘ canned

combat rations. “Some of the letters I have re{ceived from the parents of these {boys are quite bitter,” he said. He called upon Marshall to inquire

into the, situation immediately and A stream of army vehicles followed

By GERALD R. THORP . There had been no substantial imes Foreign Correspondent check of motor accidents in Luzon ‘MANILA, June 4.—The Philip-|and others of the islands, but it ap« pines has abandoned 500 years of | peared tradition and shifted its traffic from | 8reater than usual. left to right. The Carabo a Problenk The whole thing was accom- The ‘caraho, which h ave plished with surprisingly little con-|trained for centuries to plod a

fusion, although pony and carabo on the left, are expected to pre

carts, ordinarily a substantial part/sent a problem in t of traffic, could hardly be found.| The a are a) ans . I was standing on Taft ave, Ma-|stolidly along the highways, pulling nila’s South Side thoroughfare, at|wooden-wheeled carts. Whether midnight, the time the change was| they can be conditioned to the new scheduled. A southbound weapons order remains to be seer. carrier . suddenly veered from the| The shift originally was sched left to the right side of the road.|uled for April 1, but government officials despaired of making the

| “to correct the condition promptly | the same pattern. | change without more advance warn-

if it does exist as reported.” “I am sure that you will agree our’ fighting men are entitled to,

der the regularities affecting all ,,,q should receive, any fresh food | for the Weapons carrier.

'available, regardless of where they | last. second it veered to the right. [are serving,"

Brown said,

OTTAWA, June 4

will be slightly lower.

435,500,000 bushels harvested last

EE ——_ | meted MPs assigned Southport chapter 442, 0. E. S, CANADA ‘WHEAT CROP DROPS (he new order of driving! | PY. (U, P)— . Wednes-| Canada’s 1945 wheat crop probably | made the shift with little ‘difficulty, | Hartheim on the Czechoslovak bors than the! probably because they found it easy ‘der at which an 8. S. clerk said

ling and postponed. it until now.

Copyright, 1945, by The Indianapolis Tim and The Chicago Daily el Ine, ~

BURNED 65,000 BODIES 12TH. ARMY GROUP HEADThe jeep was loaded with white hel QUARTERS, Germany, June 4 (U to enforce : : —Third army troops found a insane a

Follow Army Drivers

A northbound jeep persisted stub-| {borrely on the left, headed directly At the

Filipino drivers of motor vehicles crematorium for the

to follow the army of G. Is who'the Germans cremated 85 ,000 bodieg

and watering of the soil Will re-/ po immer and 13 to 15 days : tent : : : we heads— | culation, advertising and total busi- able commissioned service during and Francis E. Venis is worthy vear, officials of the department..of handle 75 per cent of the cars and at an average rate of 100 a day, ’

sult. in uneven growth and poor To get white autumn. g J

| the war.

| trade and commerce said today.

| trucks in this area.

it was reported today.

heads. when heads are three to four inc hes | ness volume.

Caulifiower, as a member of the in diameter, pull outer leaves over cabbage family, is subject. to the the top and tie together. same insect pests and diseases.| caulifiower heads, while very] Club root is not present unless the slow in their early growth, develop | soil is acid; mildew can be avoided rapidly at this stage and should be by treating the seeds or newly set-igjven plenty of water to insure] out plants with semesan or calo- heads of quality. .Heads must not | clor dust. Aphids are beaten With remain on the. plants after reaching | a nicotine-sulfate spray, and worms maturity; they should be cut and should be hand-picked as well as used, or placed in cold storage. dusted with rotenone Examine the heads every two or Any of the Snowball strains are three days to make certain of their recommended. Early Snowball is. development; At left too ‘long, the | the first to m to mature, its pure white “heads heads open 1 up and become ricey.

Allied Cs: Ordination Lacking

In Tréatment of Germans

A] Wiss a

| |

By PAUL GHALI larrested suspects or complaining | Times Foreign Correspondent about the curfew interfering with BUCHS. ON THE AUSTRO-SWISS mass. BORDER, May 30 (Delayed). —It is As to the delicate question of | i _ordi. | displaced’ ersons, there are some hugh nme for he ilies 10 eo-ondt- ra in Mens and 200,000 in| nate their action ha pi ® | Munich. Naturally the French toward Germany's want to recover their remaining | beaten people. political deportees as soon as pos- | At least that is § sible. The American high comthe Corviclion ar- 7 mand, however, of course imposes | fived at alte = a quarantine on these people, who | 500-mile tip may spread typhus back home. through Fren ch Some French officers and all po- | and Alnerigan go litical deportees can't understand | cupation zones of why they must wait to go home. | South ; Q er many In fact, Maj. Gen. Jean de Lattre | during which 1 de Tassigny himself has had to inmet many - hospi- tervene tor prevent Frenchmen | tal public 'rela- . from smuggling deportees home- | tions officers and helpful military ward before the end of their quar- | gOVernors. antine. - ” Consider the ‘difference between the methods employed - by ihe The victors may lack. a co-ordi- | French 1a tele zonie and. the nated policy toward the vanquished. Americans in theirs in dealing wih But the attitude of the vanquished the occupied peoples. In Austria, ; ,iversa) — sickingly servile. for example, the French OCCUPY 21 mne American administrations fair portion of the Vorarlberg re- ,,. ectered by applicants for jobs. gion. while the Americans boss the Everywhere would-be «collaboraTyvol, tors” approach them. Nobody adGruber Favored mits he was ever a Nazi. Germany The French differentiate between is as devoid of Nazis today as the Germans and the Austrians. In Milan a month ago was of Fascists. Peldkirch the burgomeister accom- | The current German phrase is: | : | “Were innocent and now Wwe | panied the French commanding "have to suffer for what those swine officer to a recent official function. 4iq." something which could hot have Nobody in Germany has.’ .the happened in the American-occupied slightest sense of common responTyrol.' sibility, let alone guilt. Karl Gruber, local resistance copyright. 1945, by The Indianapo leader there, is considered a good and The Chicago Daily News,

man by thes Americans, but they stress that their troops are the DR. WICKS TO TALK AT conquerors. Austrians are not per- SCHOOL CENTENNIAL

mitted to fly national flags, though in _French-occupied zones they Dr. F.S.C Wicks who was gradadorn every house uated 50 years ago from the MeadIn Germany prover the reverse je Tneolefical school will speak holds true. The French, shocked to see well-fed, fat German women wearing silk stockings, remember their own destitute, sallow-face child victims of five yeais of Nazi oppression. Asa. result, able food stocks have been rem from Germany to alleviate hunger tus of All Souls at*home

Mr. Ghali

None Were Nazi

|

lis Times ne.

at the celebration of “the school’s 100th anniver= sary this week, Dr. Wicks isi

minister — emeri=

Unitarian church Famine Anticipated He assumed. Lhe In American-occupied vari pulpit in 1905 retired 33 difficult problems is th su vears later. Dr. plies Not n E Burdette requisitions negligible kind- Backus, his suc- Dr. Wicks hearted American officials are wor- Cessor also is in Chicago attending rving about how to avert famine by the centennial. Dr, Backus. was a next fall member of tlie class of 1913

© ARMY ENLISTMENTS ARE AGAIN IN ORDER

WASHINGTON, June 4 (U, P. You can now join the arm) No for the Frencl Regular ‘enlistnrents were or in France hibited under the national deIn the American- 1pied. Tw fense act and recruitment during

long filles of mguarded oidiel wal so far was obtained sole-

WASSON'S TOILETRIES, STREET FLOOR

on the contrar n f the most and

No German soldiers except thos #+-working ' u 1 "French armed g roads whe: French-occupied oners not In camp

the supervisior

headed by-their own officers, throng | hrough selective service inducthe roads in the very trucks which tions, voluntary or compulsory they stole in France y have 8 week President Truman been told to be good boys and 1 igned a bill authorizing straight port to a nearny mp to be 118~ nlistment charged - - In southern \ PLAN CARD PARTY largely Catholi Ameri ro he public relations committee and Cathol Council 5, Degree of fine oloc as ill hold an apron In the French zone commanding card party 1:30 p. m. tomorrow in officers say the bishops are "pests the Food Craft shop in the Cen-

constantly intervening to y building

RATION CALENDAR

MEAT-—-Red Stamps E2 'through Aug. 31 D1 through H1 good J2 are valid through June 30. K2, through Sept. .30 through P2 are valid through July fA a : A" 31, Q2 through U2 valid through 1 GASOLINE wate upon So Aug. 31. V2 through 22 good. through jo sou; ! ns each through June « Sept. 30. Meat «dedlers will pay two _ ' SComes good June 23 for, red points and. 4 cents for each in gallons; BS and B7.and C6 and Fouid" of waste fat C7 are good for five gallons: E2 and E3 each good for ong gallon; R2 and 5 R3 each gobd for five gallons pounds through Aug. 31. SHOES~No. -1,, No 2 Canning sugar forms dvailable at “atrplane” stamps in on 3 coos] ration boards. Spare stamp 13 In indefinitely A new. shoe ration! Book 4 must be, submitted with ap- | stamp will become valid Aug. 1 plication for’ each persor listed | Any pérson requesting a“shoe stamp All ‘applicants must establish eligi- | | must present all of the No. 3 books i nity for canning sugar. |4t the family’

* CANNED ‘GOUDS-Blie stamos 1" {ES—Commercial vehicle tire N2 through 82 are valid through L1Dspec tion every six months or everye June 30 T2 through X2 are 5009 miles. ni id hous July an ¥Y2 and] . FUEL OlL—Perods 1 Sutougy 5

nrot eet protec

SUGAR—-Stamp - 36 good for

_ rr Filipinos Tackle Traffic Rule of Driving to Right

that they. would be no

Insic

A CERTAL ment is proud of its équipme preparing son copy was to ir

F. Weakley, § plant manage could find a sc called over to cat's whiskers ing?” asked M and asked her went over, and whisker, “Thi he explained, it wasn't looki he. thought th pieces.” Well, longer, they ti found it was 1 one end and tv discourage Lal on the theory and two thous three thousanc

A Case of

HERE'S A Tuxedo that with a lot of name, is there epidemic of telephone? -T the yard wher

Hoo

WITH THE LUZON (By with some of | and then deci of Balete Pass

we. returned t we had left it. struck a hill rocks on it, an As we left the hillside on

Portable I ON THE \ stallation and a portable su regiment. The Burke of Roc neat tent unit location since

Once his ur between dusk in a churchyal Only one p

A POST-W motive, the I electric locomi

Please note steam engine

_ General E motives in 19: employed an Diesel-electric

used to run power to elect driving wheels

New Type

IN MARCH railroad asked steam turbine work will be ¢ and the West * Last mont] tests of anot!

My

HYDE PA mail which I that we sho promptly. The writer

‘prefer to worl By and lar sitting in idl cannot find w In this las

“only a God-se to the econom - That is the * a employment | benefit of the “or who do no