Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 13 August 1945 — Page 18
EOF snag RA Ad
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
I ‘IL. Kenen is executive secretary of the Amétican Jewish Conference, which was estab lished in 1943 to speak for the majority of American Jews on problems of Jewish post-war reconstruction in Europe and Palestine.
By L L. KENEN . Written for The Times The Labor landslide in the Brit-
ish election is expected to spill into the Near East and batter down the Tory-built walls that now bar Jew-
Relieve painful shoe pressure / )7 on the sore spot and quickly ing pads. Sold everywhere.
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America’s Favorite Laughs
Hver hear about the native who a
sadly confuged in giving directions a finally confesses: “Mister, if I was going to Harrodsburg, I just wouldn's stars from here!” Every month The Reader's
ish immigration into Palestine. By resolution of the Labor party's executive committee adopted last December, the Attlee government is committed to a program which would permit Jews to enter Palestine, become a majority, and establish a Jewish National Home in that country. - That would sharply reverse British policy since 1939, when the Chamberlain government issued its Palestine White Paper. >
Limited Since 1939
Under the terms of that document Jewish immigration .into Palestine | between 1939 and 1944-was limited to 75,000, and the sale of land to
{Jews in much the greater part of
Palestine was, prohibited. The White Paper also provides that a Palestine State would be established by 1949. This would be an Arab state, since the Jewish population, frozen by
British Labor Party Victory ‘May Open Palestine to Jews
for re-examination ‘of the possi= bility of extending present Palestine boundaries by agreement with Egypt, Syria and Trans-Jordan. (Trans-Jordan was separated from Palestine by the British White Paper of 1922) The United States has always been sympathetic to the building of a Jewish National Home. President Wilsofi and every president since his time has affirmed U, 8. support. Both political parties adopted favorable resolutions in 1944.
Idea Not New
The Labor party proposal for transfer of populations is not as drastic as it may sound. A numpber- of statesmen in Europe now favor transfer of populations as the soldtion of minority problems. The Big Three, for example, proposed the transfer of the German population from Czechoslovakia. Moreover, in the 25-year period between the first and second world wars, the Arab population in Palestine increased greatly, for no barriers were placed against Arab immigration, while, ironically, the doors of the Jewish homeland were being ~losed to Jews. Today it is estimated that the Arab population in. Palestine has more than doubled sirice 1918 and now stands at 1,100,000, willg" the estimated Jewish population is 600,000. Soil and conservation experts predict that Palestine will be able
Travelling ‘Help Wanted’ Plea {4 ARE RELEASED,
from the separation center at
point system. Two men were discharged
The men released under the system .are:
, 3606 N. 1028 8. New ‘Ist.; T. Sgt.
Clarence Satterfield, T, t. John Hartman, Pfc, Carol Douglas, 182: st.; Pvt, Harold Short, T. Sth Gr. Anselmo Povinell,
1017 Laurel st.
and Pfc. Joseph Ford, 829 Ft, Way
verted to inactive status are:
Earl Merisle, R.R
HEAD-ON AUTO CR
VINCENNES, Ind, Aug. 1
head-on automobile collision
While railroad job applications are picking up, many skilled workmen still are needed. Those interested should apply at the nearest U. S. employment office or railroad. To speed the recruitment, stencils are being painted on cabooses which will serve as traveling bill-
a Vincennes hospital.
A. Bogle, 50, Tama, Ia.
5 OFFICERS RETIRE!
‘Fourteen local men were released
Atterbury recently under the army’s
the age regulation, and five Indianapolis officers have reverted to inactive status, .
T. Sth Gr. Wilford Castetter, R.R. §
st.; Sgt. Joseph Ahern, 1730 N, New Jersey st.; Pfc. Bugene Long, 348 W, 31st st > er N. Hale, 1059 Udell st.; Pfc, Malen Piercy, 319 8. Walcott st.; Pfc. N. Addison st.;
Georgia st, and Cpl. Chester Cummings,
The men released as over age are: T. 4th Gr. Paul Roth, 1001 College ave,
The five officers have have re-
Capt. Murl Curtis, 1237 Belmont ave.; Maj. Francis Carrel, 7 Park 2% Ma}. . 3 Cy
} pt. Wiest, 4243 Washington blvd, and Capt. William Johnson, 1041 Churchman si———————————————
2 DEAD, 9 HURT IN
P.).—~Two persons were killed in a
S. highway 41 near Vincennes yes- | terday. Nine others were taken to
The dead were Norma Jean Wil son, 19, Bridgeport, Ill, and George
Camp
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Indianapolis families in increasing numbers “select a Moore service for its impressive beauty, . comfort and consolation . . . at moderate costs within their easy ability to pay. - Five chapels provide maximum convenience.
J von vows
to accommodate four million people if an irrigation and power project, similar to the TVA, is developed on the Jordan river, Progressive Methods Labor party support springs in
The automiobiles were driven by Raymond Wilson and Ernest Telfer, Vincennes. .
Wife Wins Relief From Neuritis Pain
RETURN VICTIM'S BODY Thousands of suferers from the : ANDERSON, Aug. 13 (U. P).~ Petra and neurc—se: Bo hty Paps ose: wor dition in City hospital today fol-|The body of Leroy O. Beckett, 20,| foend'a EE NL I re Zionists belleve that Arab oppo-|jowing an attack last night at his | former Anderson college student, EE orig Jews Eager to Go sition to Jewish immigration intol, ... was returned here for burial. today. | really works fast. If you want to feel again Joy you can n
More than 200,000 of the 1,250,000 Palestine could have been averted . : of relief § pain—e0 {ll surviving Jews are estimated to be had the British colonial office not Police were told by two witnesses | Beckett was injured fatally in a ace Sad sleep BD sofort a Be ist and ny
NJOY LIFE. We all : _|yielded to threats from Arab lead- that Talmadge Hooper, 46, of 528 railroad accident near Dallas, Tex.,| very first three doses do not relieve that eruel ARE VINE 10 1 dt bv ele a Mem i In for | Ts in the 1930s. The Zionists also|N- Belle View pl, was the assall-jwhen he was caught between two| Pain to your satisfdction—your money will be many of us ever actually take time to | = Coo liberated coun- |8T€ convinced that the Arab masses ant, and that he had threatened'cars. and get NORITO on this guarantee. enjoy them? Here J. P. McEvoy tells | "0 ~~ cer to go to Pales-|in Palestine, conscious of the health
where wiser Latin-American Jush fie B plop about the | tine. because their prospects for and economic benefits ‘accruing
art of relaxing—and living restoration to their former status from the Jewish development, are YOUR UNBORN CHILD. Can you tell [278 DOC PEERS ay ponders . ¢ is born? Can| ODE of the paradoxes of the pres- e a babys si efor 18 a ba or de- |eNt situation is that former Prime resent them to be.
article gives | Minister Winston Churchill had always been a stanch Zionist sympm educe
In 1939, from the opposition
TRY GIVING YOURSELF AWAY, He {benches in parliament, he de-/ By the proven treatments of idea worth money—yst nOUNced the White TADS 4 & ' the only COAST-TO-COAST pudiation of England's pledges un- Syst d ted lusivel almost |der the 1917 Balfour Declaration |SYyStem devoted exclusively
and its obligations under the Pal-|to figure improvement. estine Mandate. In the Balfour Declaration, England promised to You See We aid in the establishment of a Na-| Must Get Resulls tional Home for the Jewish people in Palestine. : © |Seven methods Labor on Record make this the The belief that the Labor party fastest and safest {will now act is premised on its|system of reducdeclaration on the subject which jpg ever devel has been repeated, emphatic and| oped.
recent, . The resolution adopted last De-| LOW RATES cember proposed that the Arabs be encouraged to move out of Pales-| We operate the tine as the Jews move in. It called | |argest and finest |studios in Hollywood and Los Angeles. “We Must Be Physically Fit ‘To Win.” | “Summer Time Is Reducing Time” | Personalized Service Optometrist
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boards. The first recently was painted on this Chicago & Northwestern car, i
STABBED 7. TIMES, . [110 2 Suith smmesisiay bo
|fore the attack. Hooper is being IN GRAVE CONDITION held by police pening. investiga y | tion. :
Stabbed seven times with an ice
Digest receives thousands of funny |immigratioi restrictions, would be stories. Many about one-third. > Ever since the White Paper was issued it has been under bitter atsale—brings tack from the Labor party, which A Souohon of 17 favorites. has characterized it as an act off ~ shie 3 Chamberlain appeasement. part from the fact that Jewish Also in this issue Opening of Palestine’s doors|settlers have introduced demo- ; : would enable hundreds of thousands cratic and progressive methods in pick, Granville Smith, 24, of 1756 y her 9 |of homeless and dispossessed Jews|a backward and feuddl section of Arnolda ave, was in serious con{of Europe to rebuild their lives|the world. there,
SOLTIS and FRAY —DENTISTS — 8', E. Washington St.
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» Among the other illustrations are the old Bates House, showing the balcony from which Abraham Lincoln once spoke; a mule-drawn streetcar, 1868; the original Union Station, first in the United States; Washington Street in 1862 and 1874; the building once used as a church by Henry Ward Beecher, where the Hotel English now stands; Governor Morton's and President Harrison’s early homes here; our first postoffice, in 1850. :
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Eyes Examined, Glasses Fitted For Those Who Need Them
DR. H. C. FAHRBACH
This] dianapolis learned th reply. The ¢ ernment kicked off world, They the -enem:; ground dr The lo in the nig ind every]
» In 1865, when the “Indiana National” Bllied sury opened for business, the population of Indianapolis was estimated at around 54,000. Today, the business enterprises of Indianapolis serve a city population approaching half-a-million. The “Indiana National” takes satis-
» Our growth in total resources, capital structure and savings deposits is shown in interesting graphs. The many services provided by the ‘“‘Indiana National’ for its customers are listed and explained.
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THE NAME, ROYAL AMBER,
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THE NAME, ROYAL AMBER,
Building now stands. This was only one year later than the establishment, in 1834, of the Indianapolis Branch of the State Bank of Indiana, which was the forerunner of The
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