Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 12 July 1945 — Page 4
"FALSE TEETH
That Loosen
Need Not Embarrass
teeth have suf. embarrassment because their
y wearers of false slipped or wabbled Hise. Do not live
Shing 13 Job.
sprinkle a Nttle the alka line (non-acid) iy on
Holds false teeth more
aust
our plates. Ry 80 they fee! more comfortable. Does not sour
Checks “plate odor” (denture breath) FASTEETH st any drug store.
{CAR RATION LID MAY BE LIFTED
Free Market by January Is Predicted. (Continued From Page One) There is an estimated backlog de-
at in
mand for five to eight million cars,
- AS MACHINELESS
NO HEAT! NO WEIGHTS!
NO PULL! Regular $10 Value 5% NOW ONLY Open Every Nite Till 10 P. M. NATIONALLY ADVERTISED
Ne Eiuziety, No Heat. Fine for Textures
’8 50 Worth Toies far Much.
Ig BAIA N11) UL LLL EXTRA SPECIAL
PERMANENT $3.95
COMPLETE WITH PUSH-UP SET
Shampoo and Set . . . $1.50
% No Appointment Needed * " 118 MONUMENT CIRCLE
Phone L1-0527 20 Experienced State-Licensed Operators
TEE GROUND FLOOR—WNERE THE BUS STOPS
Things to Keep _Them Cool!
Sorry, No Mail or Phone Orders Filled!
- VALUES IN
Short sleeve shirts
E E i I i = =z - z 5 - = = = > i Z z z % g = i Z i -
however, and two or even three years may elapse before everybody who
buy one. Many dealers have already estabtlished “priority lists” for people ‘wanting nétw cars. | The -aute- industry now has a | go-ahead to turn out cars at a top [rate of 2,000,000 a year. Yesterday | {auto industry men asked the WPB | | for permission to build facilities [to turn out 4,000,000 cars annually,
Employment Factor The WPB told the auto men tQ
| equipment they would need to | turn out 4,000,000 cars Pstimates |are to be submitted within a few | weeks. | Producers are anxious to begin the expansion soon in order to {minimize unemployment resulting [from munitions cutbacks. It 1s | hoped they can reach the 4,000,000 [rate by late 1046. | | The WPB said that on the basis of the best available information {controls on all but fiver materials {used in ajtomobile manufacture can be relaxed or revoked by the {end of the year as planned. | Tin is the greatest problem, and {Industry men are trying to find a | substitute. Antimony, cadmium, |burlap- and chromic acid are”lesser problems and substitutes can prob{ably be found. The office of price administra{tion is trying to work out prices | for new cars. It has arranged to {meet auto makers individually to \iron out price problems. WPB | [predicted swift action, The need for price schedules is |pressing. At least one manufac|turer, the Ford Motor Co., already | has an assembly line rolling. Other | plants are said to be coming into Production soon.
Ford to Make Drivers Of Disabled Vets
DETROIT, July 12 (U. P).-—
{Henry Ford said last night that “no {man who lost a limb in the armed |services of our country is going to have to pay anything extra to drive a Ford automobile.” He said the Ford Motor Co. will | provide special auto driving equip-
(18 MONUMENT CIRCLE _
Infants’ Cotton Kni
Full cut and neatly tailored.
Infants’ Cotton Knit Shirts —
Infants’ Fine Mercerized Anklets - Infants’ Cotton Crepe Wrappers o;
Open down-the-front wrappers in whit
Infants’ Cotton Knit Vests
Sleeveless vests with reinforced bottomx :
Infants’ Knit Creepers Es A Pastel and white creepers with applique t
Infants’ Embroidered Broadcloth Sui:
White and pastes sun suits.
Baby Powder _:
| ment free to veterans who have {lost arms or legs in battle. | The company has developed spe- | cial equipment which can be installed in any Ford automobile— od or prewar. It will be available for the Lincoln and Mercury, as | well as the regular Ford.
DUINSTAYES .2 AYRES
The “BUY war" ‘of Indianapolis—— The BEST of EVERYTHING for BABY
ttn dant
WEATHER LAYETTE. (NEEDS
wb and dowis..
in slipover and tie side styles.
——
1
Fast color.
Johnson and Johmion or Mennen’s baby powder.
wants a new car will be able to}:
{draw up estimates of plants and | peen taken off Wake island by the
icockroaches and the whole ship
I EA
a Ea be TH
- AJ
¥ ht. irragils Es ike, $2.00
By EDWARD L. THOMAS United Press Staff Covrespoundent GUAM, July 10 (Delayed).~ Death, dirt and disease — and a Nipponese skipper bursting with curiosity about Babe Ruth and the New York Yankees — were the strange cargo of a Japanese hospital ship boarded by an American naval party off Wake island last week, - The stench of death. and corruption hung over the entire ship and trailed it like a foul cloud, so strong that the odor permeated the American destroyer U, 8. S. Murray standing by more than -1000 yards away. Members of the Murray's boardling party who went aboard the Takasago Maru on July 4 and § revealed today some of ‘the pathos and humor they found among the crew and the nearly 1000 starved, sick Japanese soldiers who had just
hospital ship. The Takasago Maru’s skipper, a former third baseman on a JapaInese navy team, wanted most of all to know if Babe Ruth was still alive. and how the Yankees were doing in the pennant race. He was assured that the Babe was still alive and doing somewhat better than the Yankees—now. in third place. Odor of Starvation The skipper eagerly offered the Americans tea, beer, sake dnd whisky—in that order—in exchange for their information, according to Lt. Prank Huggins, Hollywood, Cal, who served as interpreter for the boarding party. But humor; conversation and the
Chase, Md.,
of cleanliness. , Lt. Cmdr. Robert White, the American destroyer, and leader of the boarding party, said his men were tense -and expected treachery when they went aboard the Japanese ship, Instead, the Japanese skipper extended a hand to help White on deck, the unarmed enemy crewmen and medical corpsmen saluted smartly and everyone gave the boarders “100 per cent co-opera-tion.” “We all went immediately to the bridge where we would be in a position to establish communications with the destroyer in case of treachery but they . were very courteous,” said Lt. (j. g) William J. Duddleson, Los Angeles, Cal, who led a search party through the ship, No Plasma or Sulfa Westlake, who inspected the wards and the ship's medical facilities, said the Takasago Maru was equipped with a laboratory as good as anything he had seen Jn the U. S. navy. But the Japanese had no blood substitutes such as plasma or whole blood, no penicillin, sulfa or synthetic vitamins, and the skipper professed to know nothing about sulfa. Duddleson at one point asked the Japanese skipper to turn on all the lights in the ship to facilitate the| inspection. “He smiled and complied, but he
quipped that he was short of bulbs because Superforts the light bulb factory in Tokyo,” the officer said.
had destroyed
Cmdr. Paul Louis Devos, Chevy skipper of the Ameri-
fate of the Yankees fell flat in the |can destroyer, said he was proud of
atmosphere of death that filled the| ship. The American officers and men were sickened by-the-“‘odor of star vation, like a sweet, sickly odor of {rotten fruit, so strong it made the men cough, cover their noses -and mouths and hesitate before entering the wards,” recalled another of the boarding party, Lt. (jg) Robert E. Westlake, a navy doctor from Oakland, Cal., and Ridgefield Park, N. J. Westlake said the luckless Japanese troops -removed aboard the Takasago Maru from Wake showed all the symptoms of starvation. The ship, “he added, apparently had medical supplies enough for only about 150 cases, and he agreed with the Japanese doctor who said: “Many will die tonight.” Below U. S. Standards Westlake estimated that 15 per cent of the cases would be dead before they reached Japan, although he said most of them, with proper | treatment, could be in shape to fight again within 60 days. The patients themselves were kept scrupulously clean, but the wards and ship’s galley were overrun with
the way his boarding party conducted itself.
party included R:. P. Gregory, Oak~land, Cal; R. O. Reese, Kirklin, Ind. and Lt. R. P. Brown, Lupton, Cal.
THE INDIANAPOLIS 1 TIMES Polite Japs Serve Liquor to Yanks Boarding Death Ship
was far below American standards
San Francisco, Cal., executive officer of
¥ lcerned”
Other members of the boarding |
PETIT DEFIANT OVER GAMBLING
Feud Flares After. Killian
Issues Warning. (Continued From Page One)
that the two aforementioned gaming houses had been blacked out. No warrants had been issued against their proprietors. “I received no letter from Killian, but he was at the jail late yesterday evening to see me,” the sheriff explained today. “l was not here. I called him later by phone. He told me of receiving anonymous letters and phone calls.” Col. Killian sald Howard Goar's heckling expedition against the statehouse last Thursday had “nothing to do as far as I'm conwith the gambling ban. He also said state police were not involved - in the shutdown of the two county establishments mentioned by Sheriff Petit. Asked why he instructed Petit to act against county gambling after the lid apparently was already in ‘the process of being tightened, Col. Killian said he had received a few complaints last week. ‘Co-operative’ Proposition He declined to make any statement on the gambling situation in Muncie where business is reported
time. Referring to the Marion county crackdown, the state police superlintendent . said: “This is merely a co-operative proposition. Sheriff Petit is very co-operative.” In an apparent reference to newspaper reporters today, Sheriff Petit | declared: “I am not running for |office any more. - If I were, I would be afraid of you fellows. know you fellows know what it's all about. If you don’t, you should.” As he strolled out. of his office
{to have been flourishing for some|’
to meet newsmen, the sheriff wore a broad grin. “Good. morning boys,” he said, “I presume you want to talk to me.” The sheriff ‘said he was seriously hampered by lack of law enforcement &gquipment and agents. Not Enough Cars “I don't have large squads of deputies to send out,” he said. hardly have enough to protect. life and property in Marion county. I don't have good enough cars. They aren't safe to ride in. “I asked for 15 new automobiles and they granted $10,000 for them.” He emphatically denied a report that he was “out of the city” last
ment was made public. “I was upstairs in bed when a police reporter came fo see ‘me,” he explained. “I had sent out two cars with two men in each to make a general checkup.”
One Way to Get British Rations
REGINA, Saskatchewan, July 12 (U. P.).—Tom Melville, recently returned to Canada from a German prisoner of war camp, told this story today:
flocked back to England in such large numbers, authorities were unable to supply them with necessary food ration cards. However, there was an abundance of extra ration cards for expectant mothers. In order that they might eat, a group of Dieppe prisoners were given cards which read: “It is hereby certified that Pvt. John Doe is an expectant mother and in need of extra rations.”
SURVEYS PACIFIC BASES HONOLULU, July 12 (U, P.).— A congressional group surveying Pacific islands for possible use as
1|post- -war military - bases for the
United States arrived here last
mile trip.
a
We Regerve
the Right to Lindel
Quantities!
i AH oo ._Each, 39¢ Zool, 29¢ a Each, 55¢
Be
Sd
saa, 19¢
19¢, 21¢, 43¢
Even Flo Bottles____ 106 "= Even Flo Nipples____10¢ Each Even Flo Bottle Caps, 100
Even Flo Sets ___._____26¢
Sore caps and nipples,
INFANTS DEPARTMENT—Dovasiairs at AYRES Wo ee Br
Kieinert's Sof
Ideal for warm
Toss away pad
-
MI———
Kleinert's Pad Pants Fillers
for baby and a labor saver for mother!
{ Tex Pad Pants. _59¢c
weather.
8 85¢
for
pants fillers. A comfort
—————
ri ————— ]
1
Charge Account or Sungel Plan Easily Arranged...
2eNO. EXTRA CHARGES .
night after Col. Killian's state
Liberated prisoners of war
night on the first leg of a 25, 000- |
‘wy J.
egret”
THURSDAY, JULY 12, 1045
OPA 0DD LOT RELEASE ‘LADIES’ SHOES JULY 9th to JULY 28th, INCLUSIVE
REDUCED 25% AND 50% ACCORDING TO STYLE
“ORATION FREE!
Ladies’ Dept.—First Floor 806 Pairs to Select From REDUCED 259% AND 50%
Ladies’ Hollywood Fashions—Fourth Floor 412 Pairs to Select From REDUGED 25% TO 50%
DURING MONTH OF JULY MAROTT’S WILL DONATE +19, OF ALL SALES TO PENNY ICE FUND
|
|
‘ALL SALES FINAL!
Store Hours 9:30 to 5:15
Monday _ Through Saturday
& v8 A SHOE $708
BE I.
A man thinks deeply before he asks the one he-loves to hare his future for better or WW Orse——tor—no—deciston he can ever make will more completely affect his life and another's than to become en-
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Important, too, is the selection of her ring! The beauty; quality of the diamond and meticulous workmanship of the mounting will add happiness for many, many years. In making your selection’ at Rogers you can do so with the satisfaction of’ knowing that
every article is of the finest
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*a
Yes, a Diamond from Rogers—is the natural Sequel
to that Great Decision. )
EE ii ati
REESE SE
