Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 18 June 1945 — Page 8
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
TIED GY 7 veo ones ~ STARTS BACK
Plymouth Seeks Housing for | Bombed-Out Families.
By B. J. McQUAID orrespondent
Rotenone is a most valuable in- | secticide used as a control oii ‘against both chewing and suckin insects. It may be used as a dust or a spray and.in combination with some kinds of fungicides. Rotenone
. .~ By Henry L. Pree
Rotenone Good Insectitide For Most Garden Blights
per-colored, about one-third inch in length, with 16 black spots on the wing covers. The larvae are a fuzzy yellow. with stout branching spines. Since both the young and
BUREAU CLAIMS NA PRISONERS UNDERFED
LOUISVILLE, Ky, June “18 (U. P.) —German prisoners of war | helping relieve the acute farm labor | shortage in Kentucky are being fed {rations “far below. the nourishment {required for farm labor,” the -Ken{tucky Farm Bureau Federation ! charged.
{ The charges were contained in
By NAT A. BARROWS
Times Foreign Correspondent ! THE HAGUE, June 18.—Deporta-
to Dutch Guiana, South America, is under consideration by the Netherlands military administration, This is suggested as one solution
PLYMOUTH, England, June 18—is “extracted from the ground-roots|adults feed entirely, underneath |g... cent by assistant federation! of what to do
While local merchants debate the | 3 one ad Sore two Plajits Eon. ee y ohly in the tropics. In fens of narow Or Wide sircels arf Te the war has almost stopped imdream of magnificent mbdern dis- | portation of rotenone, it is not plenplay windows, the authorities of this | tiful, and the gardener must be con= little English city are busy on the | servative in its use. . more immediate job of providing | Cryolite: Dust Good quarters for the! Rotenone is recommended as pro- “% bombed ~- out pop- | tection against the pea weevil, pea kh ulation. | aphid, Mexican béan-heetle, insects . Thousands of attacking cabbage, broccoli, brussels
Plymou ths in-|SProuts, cauliflower, kohlrabi, mus=| ote. Do not use lime or bordeaux | thing possible to remedy this sit- are giving much
tard, kale, turnips and collards, and |
habitants still Te as partial control of the European |
the leaves, it is very necessary to use a sprayer or duster with an upturned nozzle which will apply the material to the lower side of the leaves. Rotenone is usually sold in dust form, with a 13 per cent, content, and should be used as a dust only. Cryolite may be used as a dust or spray, and when used as a spray, one ounce, or eight level teaspoonsful, are needed for each gallon of
# mixture with cryolite.
Rotenone is the only insecticide
f main scattered corn borer, Cover the plant surjeces|, sv harmful to humans, farm’ snithroughout the thoroughly, but do not us excessive |... ang household pets. It is es-
surrounding amounts of the materials. kf countryside, shel-|
A b bstitute 4 | pecially recommended for lettuce, Cryolite dust may be Subsulluled|..i..v and similar vegetables which |
Sectktary R. H. Procter to the With Holland's : of i10 BTU | ory oe (With Hollands 3 as slowly amid difficulties of
| state's representatives and senators 100,000 war crimiin Washington, nals, collaboraProcter said the bureau had |tionists and Nazi “learned with shocking dismay” | sympathizers, that prisoners were being “fed only} Cautiously pre{half a canteen of soupy mixture paring the frameand one to two slices of bredd three work for punishtimes daily.” . ing traitors and He appealed to the states con- Quislings, Dutch |gressional delegation “to do every-| military officials
uation,” because he said the ‘labor | thought to the Mr. Barrows need now was more critical than| idea of enforced colonization. ever before. They realize that it is obviously ; . | impossible to shoot all the out-and-STATED MEETING DUE | {out traitors—numbering perhaps 20,~
Brookside chapter, 481, O. E. 8./000. So they see a possible solution
tered by relatives for rotenone at this time for use |. re eaten uncooked. Unfortunately, will hold a stated meeting and in establishing a civilized kind of
But| on many vegetables. © As protection ;; i not effective for aphids, the
| initiation at 8 p. m. tomorrow. Mrs.| Devil's island, based on reduction
plant lice, whose control is brought | Sylvia Pearl Jones is worthy matron| and assimilation.
|
about by spraying with nicotine-| and Willlam PF, Krueger is worthy 8.» - sulfate,
patron. THE IDEA of transporting unde-
Holland Consid
sirable Dutchmen and their families to fetid, swampy junglelands emphasizes the problem of purifying
tion of several thousand Quislings|war guilt without allowing the spirit
lof revenge to turn. into a blood
| bath, | Today, about 40,000 collaborators of the 100,000 under suspicion are actually in confinement. The groundwork for' the trials
| transportation facilities, lack of suitable concentration camps and traditional Dutch insistence upon full dossiers for each individual case. 3 . o o » MANY of the 20,000 serious cases, the traitors and the notorious collaborationists, will be shot. The Dutch exile London gévernment returned the death penalty to .the lawbooks for just such a purpose. But even the most rabid undergrounders now appreciate the Dutch military government's reluctance to indulge in wholesale executions. “Of our 20,000 most serious traitor |cases, about 6000 are Dutch S. S. and must have drastic punishment,” one official of the Netherlands min-
nsic ers Deporting ls." Of Quislings to South American Jungles
ike
Thousands. Gi
istry of administration explained to me. : wo * wi 8 “WE CAN and will shoot many of them. But what about the other 12,000 in this criminal classification —and the 8000 whose guilt varies from mere fraternization to. business trading but not actual treason
under Dutch law?” —“A-—great-many- will. have-to be released. They will be social outcasts, not so much in Friesland and other northéastern provinces as in central Holland, but social problems nonetheless. “The idea of sending a batch of them to our South American colony or even to the Pacific, after the Japanese war, would permit us to try to re-educate them. and their families into useful members of the community and would eliminate a source of friction in the Netheriands.”
Copyright, 1945, by The Indianapolis Times and The Chicago Daily News, Inc,
CANDIDATE INITIATION Capitol City Council 53, Daugh= ters of America, will initiate candi-
dates at a meeting at 8 p. m. Thurs. day at the hall.
A
MONDAY,
A daytime park program for
and split” shifts will begin Tiflirse day in Garfield park. The weekly outings will be sponsored by the Central Y. W, C, A, and the city recreation departe ment for six weeks. : Registration for classes and ace tivities may be made at the Central YY, W. CA; untit-Thursdiy the Garfield park community house at 2:30 p. m. Thursday. Programs scheduled include informal dancing,
Swimming and tennis instruction also will be, available. Staff members who will provide direction and instruction are Miss Norma Kofer; city recreation dee partment, and Miss Lucy Shulte, Miss Mabel Kempf, and Miss “Dorothy Bodin, all of the Y. W.C. A,
SNIDER STUDIO RECITAL The piano students of the Snider Studio of Music and Dramatic Ard will be presented in an annual ree cital Friday evening in Hollenbeclg hall, Y.W.C. A. Mrs. A. Josephing Gray will assist with vocal see
lections.
” ” ” “TO ME, perfume has existed largely because perfumes makes women desirable to men,” she said. ‘Perfume has an emotional quality—as powerful as music. It has also held religious significance. = : “It is an art with me. I am happy that: people appreciate my art enough to want my perfume.”
NAZI UNDERGROUND OIL PLANTS FOUND
WASHINGTON, June 18 (U. P.). —Most of Germany's oil refineries were bombed out of production {several weeks before the Nazis surrendered ‘but several underground plants were substantially completed and ready to go into operation, it has been disclosed. A group” of American technical experts selected from U. 8. oil companies followed advance elements of the American armies from the day of the invasion and made “many very interesting discoveries,” Deputy Petroleum Administrator Ralph K. Davies reported. “While it is too early td give definite results of the investigation,” Davies said, “many very ine teresting discoveries have been made which should contribute to im- | provement in techniques in pro-
| ducing petroleum products so necesPROMOTED TO MAIO | sary for victory in the Pacific.”
Louis J. Luzar, 934 N, Haugh st. |. lle has been promoted to major. He HONOR PAST MATRONS Southport chapter, 442, O. E. 8,
or friends. ; be the population, against the Mexican bean beetle, Mr. McQuaid which fell from|it should be dusted on the vines 225000 to 120,000 is already back to every 10 days until the pods begin 150,000, Luftwaffe raids demolished | to form, then switch to rotenone. 4000 homes and the occupants of| Do not use lead arsenate or paris 14,000 more had to be moved, out of | green on beans, as either of these a total of 48,000 pre-war dwellings. | will injure the vines. Cryolite is Sometime next month the con-| likewise recommended for control struction of the 2000 prefabricated | of cabbage caterpillars, that group houses allocated ‘to Plymouth to of leaf-eating worms who damage ease the housing situation—they .are cabbage wherever grown, until the of plywood. construction made in| heads begin to form; apply rothe U.S.—will begin. ZMeanwhile,|tenone after the cabbages begin to the authorities are arranging to ac-| head up. : Eris oor) Quonset ‘huts RO iRger Mexican bean beetles: are cOpTU the~¥, Sari 99. NAVY. iri These will serve as temporary shops an Sores $75-An-Ounce Plymouth Is No Paradise ! ofe To the war-jaded eye of a traveler Ceiling Put On such as your correspondent, returning from the devastated continent of | Rare Perfume Europe, any community with an en-| By JOAN YOUNGER tire block of buildings left intact] United Press Staff Eorraavosdens ... | NEW YORK, June 18.—BernaSasttis 4 Pargjtise of order and Sivilt- dine de Tuvache—or Mrs. Howard sation. But Plymouth is no para- Angus to her friends—sat in the dise to its citizens. scented suite today and discussed One-quarter of Plymouth’s houses| the simplicity of getting OPA apwere left uninhabitable. Families) proval for a $75 an ounce (plus are still doubling up, and menfolk,| tax) ceiling price for perfume. employed at the great naval dock-| «1; was no trouble at all” she yards, are having to go by train and| iq “I simply submitted the bus, or trudge miles afoot, for tem- | .qgt sheets on the rare oils I porary reunions with families un-| ,,;4 and got their okay on the able to squeeze into dwellings left price.” habitable. : : The perfume was named Zezan. _ The Germans did no appreciable. y,qyme de Tuvache likes the direct damage to the dockyards,| 4 of Z's. The OPA had nothWhich were their real target, flat ing to d# with this. It was put laning instead Plymoutt's business on the market last week, and docenter and dockyard workers’ homes, ing very nicely, she said. killing 2000 civilians and injuring 7 & 5000. ; ACCORDING to Madame de Neither did their raids cripple | Tuvache, the perfume was comwork in the yards, for labor, drawn pounded from oils imported “from from emergency repair pools, was | all over the world” in a secret rushed to the town to clear away, formula which took years of backrubble and restore buildings in less | ground and a year and a half of areas. Men and equip-| experimentation to work out. ment were soaned also by the armed| 1t was then aged for another forces and the women of Plymouth| year and presented to the public donned overalls. Sixty, hired in in one-ounce bottles, 1942, are still employed in fulltime The hottles are shrouded in Jobs by the city as rubble clearance, | gold-burnished sculptured African damage and repair teams. heads, “for a romantic touch.” Rebuilding Program Ready ¥ 28 : IT WAS NOT, however, the Fifty-seven thousand calls have, most expensive perfume in the been made on the city for structural | world.» repairs. | : “ City engineers have prepared | An earlier Tuvache model, “Jas- : min of Egypt,” topped it. Brought their reconstruction program. It “ dy | out in 1941, “Jasmin” sells for provides for rebuilding the center 3100 an ounce (plus. tax) of the city along attractive modern| "0 a tor. lines, with broad streets and hand-| merly wrote plays said that she some parks. Attention has been ;COF WORD BOON CN in lite in paid to the esthetic as well as) et y 2 e functional considerations in the lo-| th history of perfume, and began cation of ships, theaters and public collecting rare perfumes and rare buildings. Under a recent par-| perfume bottles. It became her liamentary statute, blitzed and business when friends asked that slum-blighted British towns may she compound perfumes for them, acquire property for such purposes. She said. But technicalities threaten delay. Hearings on owners’ complaints of | unfairness in compensation may stretch over 10 months. There are! arguments over details—merchants oppose the suggested width of streets. They think narrower, more congested streets better for business. But the real headaches are not such technicalities. They are Eng-| land's acute shortage of manpower | and material, and the necessity for| proceeding slowly to avoid breaking the backs of the already heavily burdened taxpayers. With» British willingness to prepare for the long, hard pull, the more realistic proponents of the reconstruction plan predict it will take a quarter of a century to finish the job. Copyright, 1945,'by The Indianapolis Times and Ther Chicago Daily News, Inc.
NORTH PARK CHAPTER TO HOLD INITIATION
The North Park chapter, O.E. 8, | will hold initiation services and a 30th anniversary celebration at 7:45 p. m. tomorrow. Charter members past matrons and past patrons will be honored guests. Mrs. Nell Owens is chairman of the food committee and Mrs. Lottie Bernhart is chairman of decora- | tions. Mrs. Cora Reimer is worthy matron and Harry L. Harrison is worthy patron.
has been overseas with the 5th air |
force since September, 1942, Maj.| will honor past matrons and past Luzar is a graduate of Washington patrons at 8 p. m. Wednesday in high school and Purdue university.| Southport Temple.
RATION CALENDAR
MEAT—Red Stamps. E2 through June 30. T2 through X2 are J2 are valid through June 30. K2|valid through July 31. ¥2 and through P2 wre valid through July|Z2 and Al through.Cl valid through 31. Q2 through U2 valid through Aug. 31. D1 through Hl good Aug. 31. V2 through Z2 good through through Sept. 30.
GASOLINE—A15 coupons good fof’ four gallons each through FPhursday; A168 becomes good Friday for
SUGAR—Btamp 36 good for 5
FOR WOMEN WORKERS
women factory workers on early day’
and at —
badmin#n, softball and sunbathing,
- to a very high. ~The unprece week by the h sin governmen the appraisal a
war. Eisenhowe + ON occasions ag! tary advisers a ments. Eisenhower 1 ence, as was _eralissimo in th have been if he More than © {ster Churchill, When he did. ( ‘to the limit, These Chur Judgment were mayor's luncheo in a sort of r ‘emerged. .the wa
Argued Bu
After Churel Aduncheon, Eisen '* “As he (Chu were tinies whe! + +. When I hy to disagree wit his advisers, ci Fimitted, no mar ‘couraged and gi by the British g Two of these dng. One was two months afte
Brot
. ENNS, Aus making speech pinning medals flags with a gre But I was °
’ hat it was du ithe war, still c
They're Go 1 TODAY'S LI up by the Rus g o Russian g fthe American ‘| BAmericans selec Bof Polk, O. ski iproceeded to h i ~ The Russiar than we, have HAmericans have Maj. Gen, Ls commander, re colors and also the fatherland. tand Col. John same medal. Medals desig
or
NEW, MIRA chemistry could against the nat
of the heart and This is the 0}
developments i available a wh that ought to bx
Seek Chem AMONG TF that ought to bi ultracentrifuge, violet afd ir chromotography temperature me A large part developed to th elements or con
NEW YORK perhaps the firs think of is our
to work has a | decent level of
|six gallons; B68 and B7 and Cb and C17 are good N five gallons; E2 and E3 each good Tor one gallon; R2 and able at ration boards Monday. Spare 13 in Book 4 must be sun: R3 ash god for five gallons. with application for each| SHOES—No. 1, No. 2 and No. 8| listed. All applicants must| airplane” gamps in Book 3 good for canning su-|indefinitél ff A new shoe ration © |stamp will* become valid Aug, 1
want can only the world have tinuous desires or less equal th: “A nation wit with a high nat spend all we ne
pounds through Aug. 31. Canning sugar forms will be avail-
