Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 22 August 1945 — Page 7

WEDN NESDAY, AU G. 22, 1048

G. I's Rest, Play at Famed Alps Resort — All for Free

By ROGFE

Scoipps-Howar

GARMISCH-PARTENKIRCHEN

now’ the alarm will go off and your ning head, will wake up on the s of fire and zeal for another day at tl

R TREAT d Staff Writer Bavaria, Aug minute correspondent, with the wildly spinleeping porch in Arlington, Va full This just couldn't be

22. —ANy

“i

he boiler works

This typewriter is now sitting in a $50-a-day room in the Riessersee

hotel in this St. Moritz of Germany \t is three degrees colder than a penguin's back porch. . Down' helow this window war-weary Gl's are playing table tennis, badminton, volley ball, and paddling boats on the lake in the * pack vard. You could toss.a ball inte the lake from the hotel window. In 1036 the winter Olympics were held on its ice. There ma} pe ice there in the morning and we can go out and make like Sonja Henie. Surrounded hy Mountains The Bavarian Alps look so close vou almost reach out to touch them. and they are all around us here. They are only a few away and tomorrow we sail up to the top of Zugspitz, the highest mountain in Germany for a little skiing. This typewriter was in Nurnberg las; night, Within the past SIX davs it has been in London, Paris, Reims, Nurnberg, Munich and now here. It has talked to such a weird collection of characters as Marcel Thi], General Patton, Billy Conn, Danna O'Mahoney, sBob Hope, and enough brass hats to sink the Queen Mary. Today

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It is 8400 { feet above sea level, and

Packard (all right, there are pictures to prove it) from to Munich, and then through this jewel-like valley between the Alps to this story-book resting place, { soldiers Everywhere A mergau Play the Passion plays.

House,

cows, several flocks of goats,

in the States Another §top astle built by Mad King is beyond description In architecture and priceless ngs, million dollars New

the Ludwig

at the

its furnish-

enw Ludwig may but he knew All Hollywood inhibited for

what and

buttons wanted. ur shooting

the more been the same ever better than |

near misses. For Non-Coms Only | This layout at non-commissigned lonely lieutenant is grounds to run the joint. to Zugspitz and other skiing. snow-fights, fishjust plain rubber-neeéking come here for three days {ree—it does not count as furlough time winter comes-—-and wants to lay six to five it isn’t here? the G .1. winter Olympics will There will he hockey, bobsledding events of alle kinds, possibly an ice-skating troupe such as the Ice-Capades and everything a little millionaire’s heart desires It- won't cost your guy a peénnye thanks the special service dl-

Garmisch is for men only. One allowed on the There are daily

point

trips 101 ng, and The men cach for leave or

When who

start

ski

to

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*f final

Or of |

vision of the army | And so to bed my skis,

Hans, my Alpen

stock, my yodel, my yo-yo

It's Zugspitz in the morning, and

tell the countless I prefer golden pheasant’'s liver for breakfast "Okay, mama, stop kicking me I'll get up in a minute.

CURTISS-WRIGHT FACTORY FOR SALE

(Continued From Page One)

equipment in the new and Stokelyowned plants Of the 3250 Curtiss-Wright employees, 1650 were notified yesterdav that they were being laid off while letters were sent to most of the remainder saying that the comany did not know whether it would need them later or not. Tolay'’s announcement - cleared that ip. The Indianapolis plant ther propeller plant at Beaver, Pa, employing 4000, are being closed, while those at Caldwell and | Clifton, N, J, will stay open, operating on a much smaller scale, Cur-{Liss-Wright said, The Indianapolis plant turned out 180,000 propellers since its opening in 1941, used on 13 types of planes.

and an-

| t- Optimistic Over Future i] The require

propeller plant closing will about 500 for taking invenOther employees will receive checks tomorrow and Friday from 8a m. to 4p m, W. W. Gleeson, president of L 8. Spring Clutch Corp., said his concern would give preference to laid-off propeller workers hut that | there would be no mass transfer of employees, even though it is a Curti 1bsidiary. Mr. Gleeson was. quite optimistic about his firgn's future, saying that the new factory tl ey hope to move into within two months could accomodate 2500 workers eventually, The company is working with some 60 well-known industries, tryin design applications of ‘the pron spring clutches for products of these industries, Work has started already on some of these progucts, he said.

tor

§

Ci.

| to A

JAP TEAC HER INDU CTED ¥T. DEVENS, Mass., { P.).—Dr. Schuichi Kusaka, 29, Jap- | Anese-born Smith college professor | of physics, became a buck private in the U. S. army today. He was inducted at Springfield yesterday as a volunteer. He tried to join the army last October,

DETAIN JAP DIPL OMATS BOSTON, Aug. 22 (U, P.).—Six Japanese diplomats who formerly | served this government in Rome arrived Ivre today with 8000 G.. 1s [aboard the transport U. S, 8. Wakefield, but wére held fncommuni- | cado pending. tHRir transfer to an | internment point in Pennsylvania SYRIAN PREMIER RESIGNS BEIRUT, 8yria, Aug. 32 (U, P) -—President Skukri Kuwalty today accepted the resignation of Premier Fares Elkhourys. ‘The opposition had demanded a decisive policy on the question of “having foreign troops removed from Syria.

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Limited Boosts Permitted in

Nurnberg |

stop was made at the Oberam- |(q be taken against past violators,” | birthplace of he said. The streets were | full of sleek Jersey and Brown Swiss | der and tions, several more flocks of Gi. I's, There | adcord lare so many soldiers in Europe it commissioner has authority over all] is difficult to believe anyone is left ‘salaries of $5000 or more per year, a hulking 200+ Jon medically dis |

Linderhof $5000 when paid to administrative, day, IT. professional qr executive employees Arthur said of Bavaria. The castle who are not represented bg labor bration slaying of pretty Margaret lavish {organizations

he [for unreasonable salary payments.

Aug. 22 (Ur

RL 5151

AR

SALARY: FREEZE |

'A-Bomb Sword Over All World’

PORTLAND, England, Aug. 22 (U. P.).—U. 8. Ambassador John GG. Winant said today that the world lives under .a Damoclean

RULE MODIFIED

future” because of

bomb.

‘Individual’ Pay.

(Continued From Page One) te destroy all life on this planet,”

Winant said in an address at the unveiling of a memorial to the American. armed forces, “We also know what we must do in order to avert such destruction,” he said. “We must learn how_to live to gether in friendship No other problem is important today. If we fail here, we fail everywhere.”

er of internal revenue, said relaxa-| tion of the regulations “does not] validate any salary payments made

heretofore in contravention of the former regulations.”

Hold Enforcement “Enforcement action will continue

EX-SOLDIER ADMITS SLAYING WAITRES

CAMDEN, N.

The announcement said that “un- | the salary stabilization regulawhich are being revised in| with the new policy, the]

and also any salaries of less than charged paratrooper. confessed Camden detective

to the V-

| McDade, salary whose nude,

Philadelphia

“These changes in the battered body

change in any way the nearby Hadden Heights, N. J.

Howard Auld, 25, Bellmawr, object of a to disallow deductions search after he was named “This authority under the several

tax mitted the slaying

tax avoidance and near Mt.

Ephraim, N. J,

from where body was found.

| measures to prevent inflation.” "

All. Metal Grilles, 6.98

THE A TIMES

sword “today and forever into the. the atomic |

“We have at last learned how |

, Aug. 22 (U, P.).— [cage Nov,

to-'same effect Clarence | White House J day cele- dents,

waitress, was roe Johnson outlined the confusion! It cost the Ludwig some 30 stabilization regulations do not,|found in a community eistern at|concerning the convention in a let- | oeding $10.000 and would turn the |however, Deal WPA boys green with commissioner's authority under the| {Income tax -and excess profits tax J, not have had all his regulations

five-state police in a/permission [police warrant as chief suspect, ad- announced recently by Commander | hours | Scheiberling,” Americans have regulations has always been a pro- after he was captured last night |’ thing [tection aghinst since and have scored nothing is not connected with the wartime mile

= v

TRUMAN KEY IN CONCLAVE FEUD

laxed by me ¥ few dave ago to |atllow 150 out-of-town guests hold a meeting.” (The attendance of authorized delegates to the Legion convention is 3200.)

“The American Legion has not]

{applied for permission | action

to. hold a The commander's an-|

Legion Claims He Agreed to nouncement has created a great

Talk—0DT Says No.

President Truman today becdme a central figure in the “convention or no convention” feud between the | American Legion and the office of

defense transportation.

Whether or not the President ac-| {cepted an invitation to speak at the conference which does not have ODT approval is the principal bone of contention, | "The Legion states {commander Edward Schelberling {visited the President Aug. 15 and {later announced that the chief executive had accepted an invitation to speak at the convention in Chi-18-20. Subsequently,

that

a statement was released hy Lo press the Legion says. Johnson Says No Meanwhile, ODT Director J. Mon-

the correspon-

{ter to Joseph Leib, vice commander |

N.lof the Washington Legion post,

“The American to hold

Legion has

conventions as

Mr. Johnson wrote, ‘nor has the President of the United

“Convention regulations were re.

Charcoal Burners, 6.95

National !

| to the]

deal of trouble for me again.” Denied Union Conclave The “trouble” to which Mr {Johnson probably referred was the lapplication for convention permit which: the ODT denied ta the United Automobile Workers Union Legion national headquarters here today reiterated a statément that the convention. will be held as scheduled. Legion officials also pointed out that they have a right to apply for an ODT permit up to 30 days before

|

|

traveling somewhere in Montana, eould not be reached for a statement this morning, Jack Cejnar, Legion publicity officer, said

£10,000 FIRE LEVELS BARN CRAWFORDSVILLE. Aug. 22 (U. P).—A fire which completely destroved a large barn and its con[tents on the Elmer Reitter farm near here yesterday was estimated today to have caused damages exThe farm was re{cently purchased by Dewey Hazlett {of Waveland,

no|

NAZIS HELD FOR WORK ATLANTA, Ga, Au. 22 (U, P).— The war department said today that 26.000 Nazi prisoners of war would

only one| States agreed to attend a conven-'remain in the fourth service comMiss MeDade's | tion.”

mand to labor under private eon. tract in agriculture and Industry,

: Purdue Bares

Secrets of

PAGE 17.

a

Melon Culture at Field Day

(Continued From Page One)

melon - picking to 'drep by. in

| neighborly fashion. and find out

the convention. | | Commander Scheiberling, who is|

{ |

*

what the about one famous crops

experts have to

of Indiana's

say most

Of course a prime factor in drawing a crowd was the offer to come and taste the varieties grown on the experimental farm. And there were plenty of rinds left lying around after the growers gnt through going at the melons with their pocket knives, While soaking up the water from the melons the growers also soaked up lots of technical information on why their plants fold up and die during the season During the war years Purdue

| has carried on its experiments of |

breeding various strains of both the musk and water melons to develop hybrids resistant to disease that still will yield good quality with quantity. While some experimental leads are pointing the read to success, Dr. John Hartman, Purdue experimental station, is not satisfied.

every known variety from all parts of the world. Among them he hopes to find at least one very resistant te disease with which he can cross the more succulent types. Participating in the tour of the

yet

| ‘LITTLE WHITE HOUSE' OPENS Recently he imported melons of |

‘stamp.

| tarm and discussion - hour were Dr. J. J. Davis, head of the en~ tomology“department at Purdue; | W. B, Ward, extension specialist | in garden crops, and C. L. Burke holder. experiment’ station horticulturist. Now it probably won't mean a thing to most people, but if the | muskmelon crop next vear is bad don't blame the grower, Blame it all on the nematode, And you can take your choice, You can have a cold winter and plenty of melons next year or a warm winter and noe melons. | Experts believe that a cold wine ter will kill off the nematodes which now are becoming a major | problem in the muskmelon erop, | So you can impress your friends late next summer if there are no melons. Here's the dope. I'he nematode is a microscopie worm which attacks the roots of the muskmelon causing a tumors ous swelling which gradually cuts off the plant's food supply and starves it. Now youre a grower,

veteran melon

WASHINGTON, Aug. 22 (U. P.), —Franklin D. Roosevelt's "Little White House” at Warm Springs, Ga., will be open tomorrow for the first time since his death for a special ceremony marking issuance of a new 2-cent RAosevelt memorial

———

Picnic Set — Table and

Two Benches, 32.50

a

-

~

J a

Paper Plates, 2 pigs. for 18g