Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 20 September 1945 — Page 23
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JUNIOR HEADGEAR
| TREATY SIGNING
Reconstruction Program Hinges on Pact. By LEIGH WHITE
Times Foreign Correspondent ROME, Sept. 20. — Italians of every economic class and political "|tendency are awaiting impatiently the signing of the peace treaty so|’ that the govern- . ment may begin lie in “earnest the = J gigantic task of reconstruction, : The value of buildings, railroad equipment and machinery destroyed is officially listed at ap proximately $30,- & 000,000,000, This figure represents Mr. White a future debt of approximately $666 per person. More than 7,000,000 houses have been destroyed or damaged accord ing to tentative official estimates. The task of directing the work of resuscitating Italy from its ruin will fall on the energetic shoulders of the minister of reconstruction, leader of the Conservative Demo- ; cratic Labor party, whose name is : ironically Meuccio Ruini, Million Destitute More than 700,000 unemployed factory workers-and 680,000 unemsployed farm laborers, road builders and railway workers are absolutely destitute. All these persons must be cared for by a government, which is not yet in a position to raise any adequate revenue. The basic food ration for Italians at present consists of eight ounces of bread a day, plus five pounds of spaghelti and macaroni a month: = This ration is, obviously, insufficient to sustain life, which means that most Italians must either trade on the black market, steal, or starve to death. Although Britain, by America's default, will assume responsibility for Italy’s future political and military welfare, the United States, inevitably, will assume responsibility for Italy's future economic welfare.
60 Shiploads From U, S. Sixty shiploads of grain, coal, petroleum and miscellaneous food products are expected to reach Italy from the United States this month.
During the coming year the Italian government hopes to import goods worth a total of $1,500,000,000 largely from the United States and with the help of American loans. Italy is now negotiating separate trade agreements, however, with Switzerland, Great Britain, Poland and Spain.
Copyright, 1945, by The Indianapolis Times and The Chicago Daily News, Inc.
DEAD WOMAN'S EYES GIVEN BLIND INFANT
NEW YORK, Sept. 20 (U, P.).— An eight-month-old baby, blind since birth, may soon get its first look at this world through the eyes of a 58-year-old woman, The baby underwent an operation at Presbyterian Medical Center yesterday after doctors had rushed the eyes of Eve Tobey, Stanford, Conn., public stenographer, here. Miss Tobey willed her eyes to science several months ago because she had a nephew, George McDonald of Chicago, who was victim of an eye affliction. Miss Tobey died yesterday. Her physician, Dr. Newell Giles removed both her eyes. At Presbyterian hospital Dr, Raymond C Castroviejo, who first introduced corneal transplants to the medical world, operated on the infant, Another operation was made on the eye of a man who has been blind in one eye. The names of _Ithe infant and the man were not disclosed. - However, Dr. Giles. who witnessed the operations, said that they both appeared to be successful.
‘SLAPSIE’ MAXIE’ IS SUED FOR DIVORCE
HOLLYWOOD, Sept. 20 (U. P)). —Slapsie Maxie Rosenbloom was sued for divorce today by his wife, Muriel, Mrs. Rosenbloom, a child psychologist and: school teacher, charged: the conduct of the boxer turned actor was a source of “great and grevious suffering, anguish and humiliation.” Mrs. Rosenbloom sought an equal share of community property and support from her husband's estimated $40,000 annual income. He operates a nightclub and appears in motion pictures. Married in Las Vages in 1939, the two separated once in 1942 and again in 1943,
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