Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 20 September 1945 — Page 1
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[SCRIPPS ~ HOWARD } VOLUME 56—NUMBER 166
--
THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 20, 1945
Entered as Second-Class Matter at Postoffice Indianapolis 9, Ind. Issued daly except Sunday
P
RICE FIVE CENTS
<Q
By FRED W. PERKINS Scripps-Howard Staff Writer DETROIT, Sept. 20. — Leaders of the automobile industry have called off definitely their proJected October showing of new cars. There won't be any new cars until management reaches an agreement with labor, That is-a fact facing any emissary from Washington trying to
untangle the confused labor situation here. This applies to Judge Lewis B. Schwellenbach, the new secretary of labor with unprecedented powers, and to Edgar L. Warren, new head of the U. 8. cenciliation service. Automobile production is on dead center because (1) the Ford Motor Co. has stopped its production lines and laid off 50,000
STRIKE OF NATI
TIE-UP ONS OIL
IS THREATENED
Thousands Join Wa
lkouts in Production
Areas and Refineries From Corpus oi] } Christi to Calumet Region.
By UNITED PRESS
Creeping paralysis beset as 11,000 C. I. O. oil workers
the nation’s oil industry today
in six states left their jobs to! back demands for a 30 per cent wage increase. Elsewhere on the nation’s front, strikes and shutdowns jdled 200,000 workers although a break appeared imminent in the serious labor reconiersion bottleneck in the auto-
DEPLETED RESOURCES— U.S. Reserves
Of Oil, Ore
Ly
‘Shot’ in War
By CHARLES T. LUCEY Scripps-Howard Staff Writer
ASHINGTON, Sept. 20.—We're the rich-
arsenal of democracy that produced an unending
, stream of tanks, planes, Yours | guns. Our armies were vici torious. We're preparing —— to lend new billions of dolme en lars abroad. . But the war took something out i p—— of America besides the vast hu-
man toll of a million men killed and wounded. The UU. 8 blasted, burned or shot away immense layers of its natural | resources. The govern- 3% ; ment experts = figure it this
way Between 1941 wf and 1946 we Mr. Lucey
used up oil " equivalent to about one-fourth of presént proved petroleum reserves, We shot away about 7 per cent of commercial iron ore reserves, and the finest—the fabulous Mesabi range in Minnesota—may begin to play out in five to 10 years, We used nearly one-fifth of our commercial copper reserves. We used more than one-fourth of our lead reserves. We used nearly one-fourth of eur zinc reserves. nn NOW, this U. 8. A. “have not” nation.
that for all practical
metals,
ADMITS HOLDUP OF
A paroled convict, Virgil Lee, 3
210 N. Meridian st., earlier this wee!
est nation on earth. The.
doesn't make the | Government officials say it's true purposes we're “have not” in tin, nickel, chromite and a few other strategic
We're shy on manganese but we can if necessary squeeze some out
(Continued on Page 6—Column 1)
BELL LIQUOR STORE
Plaza hotel, today confessed to a $46 hold-up at the Bell Liquor store,
Lee told police he and another
mobile industry. Thousands joined progressive walkouts in vital refineries, bulk stations and pipelines, threatening a complete tie-up of the multimillion dollar oil industry of the Texas gulf coast and the Calumet river area in northern Indiana. Even as crude oil -stills were allowed to cool in the nation’s largest refineries, other workers met to cast strike ballots, Union officials promised to halt operations in the rich Texas producing area from Corpus Christi to Houston and from Port Arthur to Beaumont. They predicted that, except for one plant, the great Calumet industrial area would be shut down by Friday. The C. I. O. United Oil Workers union, seeking $2 hours pay for a 40-hour week to make up for loss of war-boomed overtime, pulled 5000 workers from the Texaco refinery at Port Arthur yesterday. Workers at the nearby Gulf Oil Co. refinery met “to arrange a shutdown” there. Threatens Auto Gas The wave of walkouts, following management branding of the pay increase as unreasonable, threatened motorists’ gasoline supplies as well as fuel oil for industrial and home use. In Port Arthur, Otis Lee, chairman of the union's strategy committee, warned that the general public would receive no more gasoline after filling station supplies were ex-
stored gasoline,
area yesterday.
also walked out.
Whiting, Ind., plant, . Detroit Race is On The Standard employees,
lines.
plants at Trenton, Mich.; Creek, W. Va,;
and Lockport, 1lL
against government conciliation of
" at the Kelsey-Hayes wheel plant,
men, placing the blame on strikes in small plants that supply materials; (2) General Motors threatens similar attion, Nothing has been heard from Chrysler, third in the “Big Three.” The C. I. O. United Automobile Workers has threatened to strike each of the “big three” in turn to gain a wage increase.
Employer spokesmen are skeptical about the new labor arrangement announced at Washington. They say it is a “shuffling of the cards.” The union men want to | wait and see. Awaiting arrival of Mr, Warren, the Detroit office of the conciliation service ran into ils usual daily quota of strikes.
The Detroit conciliators found that more than 15 strikes in supplier plants are affecting Ford.
i Spokesmen for Ford said this
concern will not get into production again until most of the minor
| strikes are settled.
The Ford statement was that
| the strike at the Kelsey-Hayes
whee) spicious,
plant is the most conbut that resumption of
| New Car Displays Called Off Due To Job Disputes
main Ford operations depends on settlement of more than a dozen other minor disturbances, * + John Q. Jennings, head of the Detroit conciliation service, said seven men are being sent here to reinforce his staff of 14. The. remaining question is whether conciliation will do the job, er whether government com pulsion will be required.
GATES SAYS HE 15 NEUTRAL IN
Is Opposing Willis’ Renomination.
Governor Gates today formally disavowed any intention of dictating selection of a 1946 Republican U. S. senatorial candidate. His statement was in reply to an editorial in the Richmond | Palladium-Item citing reports that
|the G. O. P. state organization was out to squelch renomination hopes
of incumbent Senator Raymond Willis, ’ The editorial asked Governor
Gates, nominal head of the organ= ization, to clarify his stand on the U. 8. senatorial race, “I find my time is pretty well taken up with just being governor of the state of Indiana,” the gov=ernor replied in an open letter. “I have not interested myself in the
SENATOR RACE!
Denies’ Report Organization]
'Baby Star' and Her New Husband
MAI 30 FLEET UNITS LEAVING APANFORU.S
By FRANK TREMAINE United Press Staff Correspondent
TOKYO, Sept. 20. — Six American. battleships led a substantial portion of the
Six Battleships Leading Victory Voyage Back Home.
ARMY T0 CUT
OINT 10
Marshall Tells Co Score Will Drop WASHINGTON, Sept.
Nov. 1, making some The present score is 80.
LOCAL MEN ‘0UT"
mighty 3d fleet out of Tokyo bay today on the first leg of a| victory voyage home to the; United States. The armada’s departure was coupled with an announcement that three-quarters of Japan's home army of 2,253,000 men has been demobilized,
was well beyond the danger point.
to insure compliance with Gen.
The moves clearly indicated that | the American occupation of Japan
Japan herself took another step
AT NEW CENTER
Among First Discharged at Ft. Wayne.
By VICTOR PETERSON Times Staff Writer | BAER FIELD, Ft. Wayne, Ind, Sept. 20.—The title is “Mr.” from here on in. Today the army air forces threw open 20 separation centers, one of which is located here, to facilitate the discharge of flying and ground
Affecting About 2
20 Marshall, army chief of staff, r discharge point score will be cut to 70 on Oct. 1 and 60 on 2,000,000 more eligible for release.
Marshal promised that by midwinter all men with at least two years of army serve
SCORE OCT. 1
ngress Discharge to 60 on Nov. 1, Million.
(U. P.).—Gen, George C. evealed today that the army's
lice will be eligible for release.
By then, he said, the point m as it now stands hardly will jaye, a ied in the army’s demobili« | zation program and there will be an {answer to the now-troublesome | problem of discharging limited serv{ice personnel who never got overseas to earn additional discharge credits, : Other Reductions °* It also was disclosed that on Oct. 1 other discharge point scores will be reduced as follows: 1. Field officers, 100 to 75 “across the board.” 2. WAC enlisted personnel, 41 to 36, with a further reduction to 34 on Nov. 1, 3. WAC officers, 4 to 39.
selection of the next Republican candidate for senator from this state. No Position, “I want you to know definitely
hausted. Lee said he would ask the city to set up “official stations” where essential users could purchase
Approximately 1700 workers at Sinclair's East Chicago, Ind., plant, one of the world's largest, joined Socony-Vacuum and Cities Service workers on strike in the Calumet More than 175 workers at the Shell Oil Co. distribution center in East Chicago
Chicago-area workers intensified their fight for wage boosts by -attempting to enlist the allegiance of workers at the Standard Oil Co.’s
numbering nearly 6000, belong to the Independent Standard Employees’ association, whose leaders have issued orders to ignore C. 1. O, picket
Other walkouts hit scattered oil Cabin Toledo, O.; Indiana Harbor, Ind, and East 8t, Louis
Leaders of the C. I. O. United Auto Workers union staged a race
ficlals to set their own house in order and end a 29-day-old strike
that I have taken no position on this matter.
next year is the proper body to make this decision. I feel that the delegates to this convention will reach a decision solely on the basis of that which they feel is best for our state and our party.” Fact that the governor deemed it necessary to answer the editorial's challenge spotlighted intra-party friction in fhe sharp under-the-sur-face senatorial. contest. Actually, there is considerable sentiment in G. O. P. ranks, top and bottom, favoring replacement of Senator Willis with a younger, more progressive candidate. This movement is rigidly opposed, however, by the Republican Editorial association, one of Senator Willis’ original and ardent backers.
Liberalized Program
Choice of a potential Willis successor is in a state of supreme conversational flux at the moment. It's the big topic in G. O. P. political circles. As such it is also entwined with the party's avowed aim to “liberalize” its program and adopt a progressive platform. Willis is especially shunned in the metropolitan centers where his
I feel that the Re-|} publican party in its convention |?
SHIRLEY STARTS ON HONEYMOON
Mate Will Return to Duty In Seven Days.
By VIRGINIA MacPHERSON United Press Staff Correspondent HOLLYWOOD, Sept. 20.—Shirley Temple, the world's favorite baby star, knew what it meant foday to be a war bride—even though the War Was over. - She had only seven days to be
with Sgt. John Agar Jr., whom she married last night, And where they were honeymooning was anybody's guess.
ultra-conservative views are considered objectionable to labor. At! this time, the G. O. P. is starting | to angle for the labor bloc and big city county chairmen see Willis as a handicap.
ator are State Republican Chair-
Charles Halleck, In some
Halleck of touted as a possible candidate.
test hands down last year.
get” may be one of his stratagems.
SCHOOL OPENS 29TH YEAR
Kk.
registered Canada.
Most frequently ‘mentioned as likely successors to the Angola sen-
man William E. Jenner and Rep. circles, where the demand for a “liberalized attitude” is strongest, Rep. Charles Evansville has been
Governor Gates thus far has been closely affiliated with the party career of the youthful Jenner, who won the short-term senatorial conMr. Jenner is understood to prefer the governorship in 1948 to the senatorship in 1946, but playing “hard to
ANDERSON, Ind., Sept. 20 (U, P.). —Anderson college began its 20th academic year today. President J. A.
Morrison said that students were | oo oducer David Selznick, who
from 30 states and) | (Continued on Page 8—Column 3) CEREMONY BANNED
» Agar, 24-year-old army air forces |physical training instructor and son of the late Chicago packer, must {report to a Utah camp for overseas |assignment, in just one week. His 17-year-old bride will go back to her parents and to work on a new picture, “Suddenly It's Spring.” Despite a shortened honeymoon, their wedding was one of the fanciest Hollywood ever has turned out. It was an Episcopalian ceremony, but it was held in the swank Wilshire Methodist church because that's the biggest church in town. Thousand Guests A thousand guests—including movie greats and studio workers— watched inside the church, decorated with 500 pink roses and daisies dyed pink to match the color scheme.
from jamming into the church.
{Warren, an honored guest,
Police were. hard put to keep them
Smiling happily, actress Shirley Temple, 17, and her groom, Sgt. George Agar Jr., pause momentarily on steps of Hollywood's Wilshire Methodist SHureh Siter their wedding.
WORLD'S END— Will Explode Into
Vapor Tomorrow,
By ED BARLOW United Press Staff Correspondent PASADENA, Cal., Sept.
Long.
wander through the
Long says.
because of Friday's date with doom. » leader of the Remnant Church o come at 9:30 a, m, time), person on earth will feel the ex plosion, Long says. souls will be pushing each othe they will find new bodies.
Richard, entered what they be lieve to be the last, 24 hours of th
up a few last-minute scientifi
made up of atoms only.
id!
Prophet Insists
20. Tomorrow the world is going to explode into vapor—if it sticks to the schedule of Rev. Charles G.
And all human bodies will van~ ish—but the souls will live on and universe, Meanwhile Pasadena school officials and businessmen issued special orders to students and employees not to skip school or work impending ~ LJ LONG, 72-year-old founder and
God, predicts the atomic end will (Indianapolis
“The earth will vanish in the “twinkling of an eyelash” and no He figures at least 2,169,868,000 around until Judgment Day, when
Long and his 32-year-old son,
earth's existence with utter calm.
” THE ELDER prophet cleared
spirit of God. But the body ‘is
MacArthur's occupation orders. Her privy councilors, conferring in the presence of Emperor Hirohito, approved an extraordinary imperial decree automatically legalizing all government. orders issued at direc tion of MacArthur, Spruance in Control mediately, It empowered the gov penal regulations if necessary, Ships of the 3d fleet pulled an
eet,
The 3d fleet, naval flotilla,
States Oct. a west coast port Oct. 15 and an
coast in time for the Oct. monies.)
Every ship was crammed wit
27 cere
eligible for discharge. troops and sailors will be picked u at Okinawa and Pearl Harbor,
breeze favored the flotilla as it lef tleships,
Iowa, Wisconsin,
Virginia. " Halsey on at Pear) Harbor t {conderoga, Moore, Collett, Taussig and Brush,
sas and Nevada and other units wi Join the fleet at Okinawa,
r fall in line at Pearl Harbor,
. |journey home. He flew to Pearl Harbor from Tokyo. , e ty Sept. P). Rear Adm. John P. S8hafroth, WASHINGTON, Sept. 20 (U. commander of Battleship Squadron|—The Japanese had develope
c |8s Pearl Harbor.
Only one thing went wrong. “And when the world ends to- SHIP T0 RETURN JA Both California's Governor eit Continued oh “Page SCotumn: 5)
CIVILIANS TO HOME
force personnel. Among, the first to go’ through were four Indianapolis men. They are: S. Sgt. Harry L. Rosenblatt, 2054 N. Alabama st; 8. Sgt. Rob-
The army also was revealed to be liberalizing furloughs and releases for hardship cases. Marshall addressed members of
congress in the library of congress
ernment to enforce the orders with
chor and steamed out of Tokyo bay early this aftérnoon, leaving occupation of Japanese home waters to ‘Adm, Raymond A. Spruance’s 5th fl
world’s greatest will participate in Navy Day ceremonies in the United 27. (A MBS broadcast said part of the fleet will anchor at
other part will proceed to the east
army and navy officers and men Additional
Brilliant sunshine and a soft
In the vanguard were four new batSouth Dakota and Alabama, and two older battlewagons, Colorado and West
Also in line were the carrier Ti- jin a the light cruisers Am-
sterdam, Vicksburg and Tucson, and | (Continued on Page 9—Column 5) vee Kyushu Nov. 1 when Japan the destroyers Mansfield, Lyman K. |
Swenson, Maddox, Blue, Samuel N.| The old battleships Texas, Arkan-
Other battleships, carriers and cruisers will |
Adm. Willlam F. Halsey, the fleet’
commander, will rejoin his ships at Pear! Harbor for the last leg of the
| (Continued on Page 8—Columg 4)
lert BE. Walker, 5601 Guilford ave.; |S, Sgt. Kenton Waymire, 1301 E. {50th st., and Cpl. George E. Mes-
The decree became effective im-|ser, 1959 Bellefontaine st. Close on their heels seeking their discharge papers and the gold lapel Maj. David BudLt. George Capt. Roger
emblem were: deth, 1128 8t. Paul st.; Brainer, Princeton; Donoghve, - Michigan City;
-
Capt.
ville. Opens With Inspection
Maj, Gen. Paul
commanding general of the
the base.
ter by headquarters, continenta.
h
p discharged finished their final proc
essing this morning, Gen, William handed them their papers.
t.
L. Cooper, Frankfort, Mich.
thanked them for their meritoriou |
KAMIKAZE PLANNED
1
| 5
Japan-to- U.S. Flier Says 10 Months Needed.
2, will command the armada as far planes capable of suicide attacks |sonnel are the deciding factors at His flag is flying on geattle and other west coast
from the Alabama. - I ttacks might | Outside thousands of Shirley| details for his 50 devout followers. points—and such a : Temple fans stopped Wilshire| “The soul has no atoms” he The Deep’ Ves oft Japan " the have materialized in eight or 1o| fests Br pigeon ki : t reates ea | i boulevard trafic for four blocks.| said. “It is derived from the midst o gre air and sea |months, Maj. Gen, Barney M. Giles menial tasks at domestic bases While:
|sata today.
The attacks would have been
P S|
| Hokkaido, the field from whic
[Japan to Washington.
TOKYO, Bept. 20 (U P.).—~The |manded one of the Superfo first ship returning expatriated| The field was the best one nese civillaps from South Pa-|japan and the only one
man went to the store to buy whiskey but that he decided to pull a holdup. The second man, he told police, did not know of his intentions and left him immediately after
Today's Labor
The wave of crime and violence which has harassed Indianapolis for
several weeks showed the first signs of a let-up last night. Yesterday and last night marked the first 24-hour period without a serious law violation since late In August, Only two break-ins, one attempted . woman grabbing and two prowler incidents were reported to police.. City police today sald the number of persons applying for gun permits since the crime wave has increased
i the holdup. Stor " LOCAL TEMPERATURES Y Sam..... 0 10am..... 67 The biggest story in America, 1a » Annes 2 i mot " today, is the Labor story . . . i x | » . oon) . . the pressure for post-war { Sam.... 71 Ipm..... 67 wage adjustments . . . its | effect. on reconversion . . . on { Jobs . ., on national prosperity e TIMES INDEX be. on. tio Amusements... 26 Ruth Millett 1 Two of the nation’s outstand"3 Business ..... 28| Edw. ‘Morgan 28| INE reporters on Labor News { - Carnival .... 16|Movies ....., 2¢| Will bring Times readers the | Comics ...... 31|Obituaries .., 14| Whole story .. . unbiased)... i Max B. Cook 17|Dr. O'Brien.. 17| Accurate... complete. ¥ Crossword ... 31| Victor Peterson 18 » | Dottie Dripple 31|Radio ....... 31 Fred W. Perkins Editorials ... 18(Ravenholt, 5; 11| "er" IIe SAE Writer and 3 i Forum ...... 18|Ration Dates. 32 3 | Mita Given... 2) |£unt Rishi, 13 + [Edwin Lahey » , Harrington 12 Mrs. Roosevelt 17| Ouistanding And analyst : In Indpls. ... 9|Father Siemes 10| ahr Sry ik Wm, P. Simms 18 Both in Detroit fagay. » ! mmoutmve
Crime Let-Up Gives Police 24-Hour Breathing Spell cowie win
Informally in England.
walnut st., also awakened when two men, one masked, entered her room at about 1:30 a. m, today. They ran away when she screamed for help. A woman, returning to her home in the 1100 block on Central ave. at about 10:30 a. m., was grabbed by a man who appeared to be intoxicated, she said. He fled when she broke loose and ran into her yard scream- | ing for help. Reports of prowlers were made by Mrs. Thelma Harris, 54 8. Colorado ave, and Ethel Lawson, 337 N. Miley ave, Both women reported prowlers around their home at approximately the same time for the last few nights,
- Police. announced 4 that a “suspect” in the fatal slugging of Mrs, Dorothy Steck cleared himself when
city at the time of the 1 held
FOR DUKE, DUCHESS
LONDON, American
moved today to make sure that the arrival of the Duke and Duchess | of Windsor off England tomorrow |
Sept. 20 authorities,
will not look official.
By request of “high levels,” per- | Buckingham palace, | officialdom- saw to it that.the pasand duchess bor will be |for Broa
haps
sage of through Plymouth har treated informally as no affair of state, The former king and his duchess will put in briefly at. Plymouth. They arg aboard the’ Argentina, operated by the U. 8. army as a transport, bound for France, The American army public rela tions office issued a statement say[ing that access to the Argentina “will not be provided by the U. 8. army,” and in effect that if re-
potters: wanted to ses the duke
even
the
duke
(U.
cific islands is’ He hemetand early in October.
ship will be part-of a fleet
|ing to Maj. Gen, Curtis E. Lema chief of staff of the strategic a
& gy ocean-going and 20 coastal |¢orees in the Pacific.
Be Treated | vessels assigned to participate in the mass return of Japanese from|gc aiegic air forces in the Pacific,
outlying areas under arrangements|..iq the Japanese had developed {Arthur wants to keep one division concluded between Japanese au-
P) ~|thorities and allled naval officers,|
evidently | it was learned yesterday. acting on word from high places, | ————mrrmmm—————
| intestinal trouble
from school. Reviewing all
food poisoning. Investigators from gate health boards, the In
ivisi fie) at pod Ee
mainte with
James Malooley, Terre Haute, and 8. Sgt. Roland E. Havens, Rush-
L. Williams, 1st troop carrier command, Stout field, officially opened the new discharge section here with an inspection of
Established as a separation cen-
air forces, Bowling field, Washington, the center is under the command of Lt. Col. Roger L. Arndall. As the first group of men to be
discharge The first man to become a civilian at this base was James
Gen. Willlams gave each man a separate farewell as he handed hint
his discharge certificate and then few words bade them godspeed, |
TO HIT U. S-6IES
made from the Mitzutani airfield of
|the three B-20's flew yesterday from |, facilities will have reached the Giles com= |
in
auditorium in an effort to halt con~ gressional criticism of the army demobilization program. He said the army expects to re= lease 450,000 men: this month and 560,000 in October. Thereafter, the rate will be 700,000 to 800,000 = month. This will continue until next spring, when the army will have to determine how many troops will be needed for occupas« tion purposes and how many more can be demobilized,
859,000 Discharged
Maj. Gen. Stephen G. Henry, in charge of army personnel, told congress that 859,000 have been dis~ charged since V-E day and that the daily rate of discharge has jumped from 2000 on V-E day to 17,000. Marshall revealed that it was not until last night that the war depart= ment received official word from Gen. Douglas MacArthur that it may be possible within six months to handle occupation of Japan and Korea with only 200,000 regular army troops. MacArthur made. the statement in Tokyo Monday, Marshall said MacArthur's official figures do not include needs at other Pacific points such as Hawaii, the Philippines, Alaska, the Aleutians, the China Coast and any 5 | gees possible outposts, . MacArthur was planning to in«
1
surrendered and this was the rea|son that European veterans were | being shipped to the Pacific as | rapidly as possible, 2. MacArthur last night cancelled his request for the 13th airborne |division, reducing redeployment of European veterans to two divisions, Releases Rushed Marshall said that meanwhile all facilities are being devoted to the {release of the largest number of {men as rapidly as possible. Transd | portation facilities and trained pers
S
{this time, he said. He took note of congressional pros
| awaiting discharge. That situation, o | Marshall promised, will be cleared h|"P within three or four weeks. In that length of time demobiliza~
point where all men for whom a useful job cannot be found will be | released,
from | | scheduled to leave | which B-29's could operate, accord- for Jan. 1 is 1,400,000 men. He said
Marshall said MacArthur's figure
y, | Gen. Dwight Fisenhower, coms ir {mander in the European theater, Istill eStimates he will need 400,000
Note to Broad Ripple: Just ‘Blame 'Epidemic' on Weather
“Cool nights’ today were blamed ination points in the school’s spot- |give Marshall a chance to tell d Ripple's epidemic of mild! | less that - yesterday agree. causéd more than 150 Broad Ripple high school students to be absent a “wave of gastro-
evidence available attributed the trouble partly to cold {word of the, general “who is 3
this morning, Dr, Herman G. Morgan, city health director, dismissed [vegetables in diet as unlikely the earlier. suspicion of respiratory. infections.
and city Ripple was only 87.
‘Water Co. and the school board's had to go home to change clothes, % ving after having béen drenched in this],
Giles, deputy commander of the | troops by the end of next June. : Marshall also disclosed that Mace
four-motored bomber capable | marines in addition to the 200,000 army troops for the occupation of Japan and Korea. 7 Marshall's statement came. a8 | congress ‘appeared ready to step into demobilization with action of its own. JH A flood of demobilization bills als ready has been introduced. Action lon them was deferred, however, to
_ (Continued on Page 9—Column 5)
inclined to|his story. MacArthur's position was des fended in the halls of congress Senator Albert B. Chandler (Dy = said he'd rather take the
cafeteria, were
Dr. Morgan . said there has been | intestinal upsets | throughout the city recently.” He Ky), nights after hot days, abundance of he Jib and knows his needs and ble mild|hand.” in Other members recalled That 4 the war they always were b trust the ment of
absence
Today's list at pal
ndents
“Many of these were |
‘morning's sudden shower.
