Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 26 September 1945 — Page 22
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LOUD NECKTIES
But Most of Them Are Easy To Please in Suits.
By H. D. QUIGG Uniled Press Siaff Correspondent NEW YORK, Sept. 26. Discharged G. I's will .take glad plaids when changing from battle uniforms to civvies, but. they want the pajamas and neckties on the subdued side. The trend toward conservation In accessories by the G. I's was disclosed today in a survey of men's clothing shops from the lowliest | Broadway emporiums to the highest { bracket custom tailors. The survey showdd that while the average soldier who rushes into a store with mustering-out pay in hand is easy to please in a suit, he balks and shies away from any new or loud tangents in accessories, “Give me something conservative —at least until I can get back In stride,” a soldier customer told the neckwear clerk in a medium-priced Lexington ‘avenue store. Want Old Styles
years ago—Frénch cuff shirts, but-ton-down Oxford collars, and slotted collars,” the clerk said. “There's no question of price. They want what they want in shirts and neckties and belts, and if they don't get it they walk right out.” With suits, it's different, The owner of an exclusive cus tom tailor shop, where business suits are $165 and up, sald that recently several discharged soldiers, old customers of his, had just given him the money and told him to do the picking. Or, take a low-price, mass-sales suit store. “They all want to know how quick they can get into a suite any suit, except a brown one for soldiers or a blue one for sailors, the manager said. Neckties Bother 'Em “The average soldier is so anxfous to get out of uniform that he’ll take any prevailing style. Some of them walt right here in the store until we can alter them to fit and then they wear them out.” The average first sale after discharge—in either high or low price stores—is two suits, or a suit and topcoat, Perhaps a harbinger of a trend in neckties was voiced by a recently discharged combat veteran as he walked along 42d street. “I feel like I'm choking to death,” he said, tugging at his tie, “Why don’t they do away with ties and dress for comfort with open-neck shirts the way we did in combat zones.”
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By GEORGE WELLER Times Foreign Correspondent
ALLIED PRISON CAMP NO. 17, OMUTA, Kyushu, Sept. 12 layed). — American and Chinese prisoner coal miners, emerging from uriderground darkness in central Kyushu, are discovering for the first time that their prison camps are next to each other, For nearly one month since the : surrender the Chinese have been going foodless be« cause their Japanese guards have departed from § camp. Their serious Mr. Weller medical condition was discovered today by two parties, headed by American Dr. Capt. Thomas Hewlett of New Albany, Ind, who was captured on Corregidor, and Australian Capt. Ian Duncan of SBydney, captured in Singapore.
HT INHIANAFORS TIMES POW Miners Discover They “Were ‘Neighbors’ All Along
(De~
B-29's today dropped the 'Chinese their first food supplies since the surrender. Hewlett reported that the nearest Chinese camp commander is a remnant of a party under Americantrained airmen, a Lt. Col. Chiu, which left North China two years ago, then numbering 1236. Three hundred ‘of the men ‘died on reaching Japan. The Japanese never provided a camp physician and the Chinese have none. . Death Toll High
In the Chinese camp, thus, every man regardless of condition has been considered by the Japanese fit for underground work. Pifty are seriously ill, and about half of these with deficiency ‘disease. The Chinese camp counted T0 men killed by Japanese guards in two years, plus 120 dead of disease, with 546 still living. The other coal miners’ camp of Chinese consists of what is left of 1365 who left China 18 months ago.
SAN FRANCISCO IS FAVORED BY UNICO
WASHINGTON, Sept. 26 (U, P). -The question of where to locate the United Nations organization has boiled down to San Francisco and
member of the Big Five to hold out for a European site, preferably Geneva, - \ Russia and China favor San Francisco and France also leans that way. This country has remained officially mute in its preference but hopes unofficially the On will go along for a U. 8, city.
Japanese and 60 have died of mining injuries. Both the Mitsui mines worked by Americans and those worked by Chinese are defective—"stripped” mines—dangerous to operate because their tunnels’ underpinnings have been removed in order to obtain the last vestiges of coal.
Fifty-four have been executed or
otherwise beaten to death by the
Geneva, with the odds favoring San |”
Veterans Urge Ouster of Bilbo
SPOKANE, Wash., Sept. 26 (U. P.) ~—Five hundred war veterans at Baxter General hospital today demanded the impeachment of Senator Theodore G. Bilbo (D, Miss.) for “spreading and fostering racial and religious discrimination.” : The war veterans’ commitee for equal rights wrote the senior senator from Missouri yesterday attacking him for his “Vehement denunciation of various segments of the American people” on the floor of congress. : The committee, organized last July to protest discrimination
veterans by a Spokane Veterans of Foreign Wars post, was roused to action today by Bilbo’s widelypublicized statements amd letters against what he called “Dagoes” and “Kikes.”
FISH WITH TEETH WASHINGTON. —Young swordfish, sailfish and marlins have long, strong teeth which gradually
Copyright, 1045, by The Indianapolis Times and The Chicago Daily api
against Japanese-American war |
TN
WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 26, 1945
AE. R, GROUP WILL
MEET TOMORROW
The Association for Edutation by Radio will meet for a business ses< sion and committee reports at 7:30 p. m. tomorrow in WISH studios. Miss Blanche Young, president, will be in charge and Miss Mary
Connor will act as secretary. Com= mittee chairmen are Miss Mary Jo Woods, C. S. Stewart, Mrs. Ressie Fix, Miss Adeline Thompson, Mrs. Lucille XK. Heizer and Mrs. Bess Wright.
THREE G. 1’S KILLED IN MORTAR BLAST
| SAN LUIS OBISPO, Cal, Sept. 26 (U. P.).~—Army officials today blamed a defective fuse for a mortar-shell explosion that killed three members of the 104th (Timberwolves) die vision, and injured 22 others.
plosion, which occurred on the fire ing range yesterday, said the shell apparently went off because {% lacked part of the delayed-detona«
degenerate as they grow older.
tion mechanism in the fuse,
PENICILLIN EYED
FOR WINTER ILLS
|
Mist ‘Inhalation May Be Used to Combat Colds. |
By Science Service CHICAGO, Sept. 26 ~The patient | who gets bronchitis, an asthma attack, pneumonitis, or even a cold or migraine headaches .this coming winter may get rellef through penicillin mist inhalation treatments, Such treatments may be given at his doctor's office or his own home, These and other disabilities in more than 200 patients have been relieved or improved by. this use of the mold chemical, technically known as aerosol penicillin, Dr, Herbert N. Vermilye, of Forest Hills, N. Y., reports in the latest issue of the Journal of the American Medical Association. While penicillin is not effective against the virus of the common cold, Dr. Vermilye found the patients got over colds faster when given the penicillin mist inhalations. Speeds Cough Relief This was especially true in the case of persons who usually develop a heavy cough a few days after the! cold starts, Many were apparently well in one
Lor two days although the treatment.
was continued for five days. Dr.
|
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Vermilye believes the reason for this
rapid recovery is that the penicillin prevented secondary bacterial in-| fections arising to complicate the cold. Improves Appetite Patients getting this treatment have a feeling of well-being and their appetites improve, This may | be one factor, Dr. Vermilye sug-| gestsfi that leads to the rapid re-.| covery. Migraine, high blood pressure, eczema, rosacea, colitis, extreme | fatigue and even mild psychoneu- | rosis are other conditions which were helped by the penicillin mist inhalations, Dr. Vermilye reports. Result of Allergy He explains that this was because the conditions were the result of} allergy to bacteria infecting the | nose, throat and sinuses. Dr. Ver= | milye does not suggest that such! conditions due to causes other than | bacterial allergy would be helped | by penicillin mist inhalations. { The fact that aerosol penicillin | can be given in the doctor's office | or the patient's home, instead of | by h ermic injection every three | houts in a hospital, gives it many obvious practical advantages. From the standpoint of treatment, this use of penicillin has the ad-| vantage of bringing the mold | chemical into direct contact with the disease germs at the site of their Invasion of the body.
Judge's Tackle
Drops Prisoner |
DETROIT, Sept. 26 (U. P).— | Justice sometimes has to be tem- |
pered with a bit of football strategy, Judge Joseph Gillis demonstrated yesterday. The 50-year-old recorders court
| judge delighted a packed court- |
room when he stopped a fleeing defendant dead in his tracks with | a flying tackle.
Judge Gillis had. just ordered |
| six-foot William McCracken back into custody when McCracken | raced for the door. The judge leaped from the bench and brought him down, Gillis played on the University of Detroit football team 25 years ago. McCracken was in court for retrial on an assault and battery
charge. After he was tackled, | he protested that he was only | going out to search for a bonds- !
| man,
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OWNSTAIRS
Ie be ww’
————
mA
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A board investigating the exe i.
He wants book with Nur
Trip Breaks _- lapanes
By, FRAN United Press
TOKYO, formed Japa. that Emperc ing’ @n unp with Gen, Arthur toda; everything in faithful fulfill render terms, (A B. B. C, by N. B. C, s
. believed” in 1
expressed to M ness to ‘abdic: said the Japa: ready was bein " yide for the @ Contents of tween the supr er and the em his orders we: Japanese sour also pledged a building’ Japar peaceful natior Stayed Hirohito call the American with him for n with only the present. The cial, broke a than 2000 year Prensier Pri shi-Kuni left this afternoon peror. ‘There dication whetl nected with H with MacArth regarding a | the Japanese. | The bespects
( Continued or
TRUMAN’ T0 LE
INDEPENDI (U.. P.),~The will . pe closed President "Ti daughter join Mrs. Bess Margaret Tr) train, leaving Saturday, T panied by. M Mrs. D, W., triends of the Miss Trum summer in © mother came | only- two week
LOCAL Sam. ...
