Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 8 November 1945 — Page 17
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p United % \ ERE gi BN 4 5-4 ¥ ae : ji - i ers ml ST 1 a ra SECOND SECTION ” DAY, NOVEMBER 8, 1945 ~~ ni rs, Soma tome 2 3 pr Where Trouble Brews in Peacetul W minute he thought Up at the bakery. They're not packed in bo ; into the room. But instead, or wrapped in corrugated paper. There's one re- ! in came another army man who told Cpl. Karsch to quirement, however—the cakes have to be in a cello- ~ thing he was told: “You have two cavities. Come back express handler can see what he’s handling and will warns of Jegines vp. next week” He never did get to see the captain. take extra special care of the package.” Pfc. Mary | Sopasition «+. Signs of the times; Pretty red Christmas boxes Stone of Indianapolis, now stationed in Miami, Fla. Greeks Pp). are stacked behind the counters at Ayres’. This year got & cake from her mother, Mrs. Florence Stone, Just reported | 8 De he A gifts will be placed in thie boxes if requested by the the other day. And, she writes, it arrived in perfect governmen Soday 3 nit : customer. Last year you could consider yourself lucky condition. . . . Turkeys, turtles, canaries, dogs and higher prices for Ih products if you got any kind of & box, much less a “Christ. White mice are just some of the things that were beg J Jurthier about masy” one. 3 passing through the station yesterday. The canary Steel Workers (C. L 3 . was in a shoe box with air holes punched in it. .. . " 0). ; Everything From Bees to Bears The heaviest traffic now is oysters, Jesse Suter Ant, te Sen aes, it 4 ens as 3 pou ary loa Jeituce uh of all Kinds snd full. The ah the unions demand fo © 3-a being sent on to another destination are received at day pay boost, it wants assurance the station here. The agency has its own ice-making how that the OPA will rise see] machine and keeps the vegetables and other perish- abse Seling pulies further to pay ables cold. . . . Some bears came in the freight station | clashes. Riot oF added ost; : few weeks ago. They were supposed to be in an act to Egypt where U. 8 Steel stated its position 8 ago y in rejecting Labor at Keith's, but got out of hand with the trainer and in BN Naccting labor Seorstary Lawit were only on the program for one act. They didn’t wack COS un . 8 appeal hat 4 cause any trouble at the station, however. They were attack Tesutnie Wags negotiating : well-caged. , . , Miss Marcella Pruitt is secretary to union, SL. Jagan} Pri Mr, Suiter. She knows just about every worker in the Mure. 3 - n presiden Stacy. even though she has only been in Indianapolis a; to, agreed about two years. s 8 =» , " PRESIDENT Benjamin Faire Rest Easy, Correction Was Made J TSIDENT Benjunin THE TYPOGRAPHICAL error in Saturday's oy Wis ail ho Jone . Hoosier profile column in The Times brought a increase on carbon steel prode : quick response from Edward J. Wilson, 3369 College ucts because of “past heavy ine
rom Boss seme len other readers. In the first edition of the paper Saturday it said that Police Chief Jesse McMurtry “freer quently retires before 10 a. m.” And Mr. Wilson quips; “Chief McMurtry surely has a tough day's work. Very strenuous drriving at headquarters early in the morning and retiring at 10 a. m.” But in the next edition of the paper the error was corrected. It should have read 10 p. m, Mr, W also was. interested in knowing whether Safety Board President William Remy had as strenuous a day as the police chief. Mr. Remy, we hear, stays up many a night past 10 p. m. and cruises around the city to help curb the crime wave. . , . Sgt. Charles Ramsay, who was baptized and taken in as a member of the Grace Methodist church in Greenland at the same time his wife joined the church in Indianapolis, is home now on furlough. This is the first time he has gn ; seen his new daughter, Dianne, but he plans to take Miss Marcella Pruett. . . . She helps see to it plenty of ‘pictures of her back to Maine with him when that you get your package. his furlough ends. : ’ . ound the U.D. By Robert J. Casey NATCHEZ, Miss, Nov. 8.—Just in case you are “What I mean to say is that we're very careful not A terested tistics about Natches—which seems to violate the law while we're violating it. 3 Totes ow iin might start in on this one: “Why, all during the war there was a police ; IY Mkely-you : regulation here that made it against the law to sell y Somebody who may be taken as an authority once e001 Jiquor on Saturday afternoons. That was to i said that the town consisted of 53 ante-bellum man- tect the soldiers coming into town from the camps. sions and an informing lot of And we all obeyed the law to the letter.” «| ante-bellum saloons. His audience by this time must have looked dizzy ; It was a pretty fair estimate in because he went on with his dissertation, i 1938, and it still is. One of the “No,” he said, “they never do anything to us. nine beautiful old manor houses has They warned a couple of guys for displaying the stuff : burned down since that time and in the window. But they were right about that. A the termites have taken s few There's such a thing as going too far, Our tax - more bites out of another one— doesn’t cover display — only sales. , , .” -the famous Goat Castle—but it “your what?” WAY b8 Neporieq that the sigons He paused midway of pouring a drink and seemed are here. , : __ astonished. .. : hai Complete ‘with “their = original" - Pai x" he - cated, ho: ID Black market (7 > ® bars and the same calendars that call it. We pay the.state 10 per cent on all illegal ? were on’ the walls when they lips pay pe : opened up, they continue as one 2 : : a eames, wine Very Confusing ' are WE ‘inquired if this tax applied also to sales of tainly not the least interesting features phony oil stock, horse tickets, counterfeit money and The hooch, of course, is new. “Maybe” he said, “It’s very confusing, we don’t that was never given a chance to grow old gracefull study it much. We just pay it. The delta never did | in Raules If you've never béen in Natchez before, have time to worry about such nonsense.” you t wonder at this, All in all, the last part of the explanation made Observe Prohibition a or a ar a MISSISSIPPI is theoretically a dry state as, rest of the South. ; indeed, it seems to have been time out of mind. Tt ~ rye is the free state of Natches” mentioned a y is legal to sell beer with an alcoholic content of less, \,..; njioeopher who shall be nameless, “Everybody
than 4 per cent and whiskey is something that
: “IF. progress is desired in the Theoretically, with the end of the war, the world entered Its Jong-prayed-for ers of peace. But the theory doesn't fit the facts—as indi. Wirestiu wf. Fetving union's cated on the map above, which shows some of the trouble spots currently making news headlines. Add to those the political upheavals in South collective b Eh ner and Central America. gest, the first step is through ' rg ign fair. action by the PILOTS HAIL COAST GUARD'S NEW DEVICE— | OR rai “septa ; 5; prices for steel products so as \ l to compensate for substantial Loran eipe oubie D- om OQCT rout norms in eur sons” 1o RGE WELLER to cut down sharply on its gas<load 2 per cent for every 1000 feet of al-| “In addition we must have ades By Seong Gwin od " GS and increase its bomb-load, The sta« Sivude due 10-the Curvature pt ue gunle Assurance a UAM-—Veteran B-29 pilots today oned the U. §S.|tions were built by the coast guard's earth, : whipped Such coiling prices wi be G its part i i Seabees | little as 15 days| the target at more than 500 miles an 80 as simultaneously to coast guard to take a big bow for its in their de- after a melon was hour. Bombardiers could not syn-| compensate for any wage increase struction of Japan's heavy industry. Before Loran was installed, bomb- |chronize their navigation aids. which may result from the union's The coard guard-installed location device “Loran” —until{ers carried a two-hour (Suply of| But, en aren cms. in tay wage demands. We oud not n recently on the secret list—was more responsible than any) FOV 0 CI FE RUG RITC SC tO be sure they would] Our steel operations at 4 Joss” other single improvement for doubling the B-29s bomb-load|,,: 700 miles by day and as much |pass directly over the target when . sas within an approximate six-month period. as 1500 by night and gives the pilot | planned. a a IBLES ESE ds Seiden A cousin to Fada, The nama is shart Big bombers regularly use radar oe paminie Tor him bo out down his © THANKS PARTLY to the coast| calling Jor Jncrenats “does for “long-range navigation” Thelis determine where they are with|®r ro cr Lo % ONE-hOUF SUPPLY, Te guard's Loran, the B-20 out GoWA| yg hresent OPA ceiling prices principle is the same in that elec-| oq bv Sand Pp the gasioad from 51,000 to 30000! 4id not permit his n to : in om| But, in great-distance over-water| yoraN Ala ahead close-in | POUNds While increasing bombs from | grant Wage increases at present, hops, radar is. ineffective and until] actics over Tokyo, Making bomb. | ree tons at first to 814 tons at the| Murray, in signifying his will ? end of their operations, ingness to resume discussions had to depend on celestial naviga-| per-altitide’ winds as high as 140 Loran, invented at the Massa- rea any time, sald tion or dead reckoning. P ried than |Chusetts Institute of Technology, % Snjeetive could be Tricky elements, like allowing |™Miles an hour, w more also served in the fecent Japea-to-| ehieved as the result of many for side winds, made calculation dif-| typhoon strength, 1 they went up-| ington (D.C) ‘record’ Tun. Taelury Swish paint io the abiliiy ficult, With Loran, anyone who|wind, their actual speed was cut to an bade o Induiy at he present knows elementary arithmetic ©an|sbout 100 miles an hour, The planes| >" made possible bad- increase wages.” pinpoint his position in 30 seconds’| for flak, be- | Yeother Himalayan-hump flying, : work, with storm winds at full in- en ie aa ona ng with as many a8. 30 trssporta, ine the same station|tensity and nil, ea | visible to one another, pursuing dif where thev| i an Vials & ferent loran lines. Loran stations collect
This shortage
ita here knows the law is absurd but we put up with it Dever mentioned In thie state sapitol except NY Jeqe because we can't outvote the eastern part of the striped rayon tors giving vidas 10 Jetihops., Shere git state. Most of these dumps are fronts for crap nk, in the soft [ll fen Tow Tart as there have always been. ames, 80 you see what the fax amounts {0 is a levy d ‘ styles, with But Natchez doesn’t seem to have heard about TIF a ig Ay Hlegsl Sock 10 ns ws es 14 to 20. A «that any more than Vicksburg or Greenville or the ...., Does that make everyting clear?” i x. = c a FAN i v 8,” we ns ” Haas eh] - “It's. flibgal and then again it's legal” explained yng ; : AE at : : the bartender in a cool retreat near the cathedral. COTTE is Chiat Dey Nove Toa ng. .simumill Science By David Dietz and sigh. 5.98 THE CRUCIAL test of how successfully the na- trench mortars and that favoyite tool of the assault sigh. | TE I a tm will siete Ta pone DICKS TNE: oo ; depend upon the role to which scientists are assigned But the trouble with the . in that reorganization. ' : it was impossible to f
through of world war I accomplished in similar fashfon with the ald of assault engineers, infantry and
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people can be’ found to keep it This warning ‘was -sounded- here
all in Germany now.
they're badly distributed.” *
lateral-passed to another.
ASHINGTON.—American policy on Germany is in the fix of having the Twelve Labors of Hercules to do and no Hercules to do them: The United States’ share in the occupation of the Reich is suffer ing from an acute shortage
is steadily growing worse. Unless something is done about it during the next few weeks the situation may become desperate. If this happens, American
station: {that made 1tpossible for the B-29
Times Washington Writer
of competent personnel, both civilian and
had any right to expect, it appears from all evidence available in ‘Washington,
The U. 8. has, in fact, taken the lead among all the occupying pow{ers In demilitaFining-agn deNazify.
way for reparations deliveries, this | evidence indicates, ‘| There has Qeen delay in only one phase of the demilitarization program, tHe best-informed quarters here declare—the. disposal of ” » » _ THIS DELAY has been caused by disagreement as to what should be ‘done with the materiel
ing the Reich ‘snd in paying thel. The U.S,
the ground speed further increased |India, are army-built.
OCCUPATION. SUFFERING FROM LACK OF COMPETENT PERSONNEL—
U. S. Needs a Hercules’ in Germany
By WALLACE R. DEVEL
ing it. The British and Russians incline to this same view. However, the French want to keep the materiel for their own use and the use of certain other countries. Agreement on this problem, as on others, requires a unanimous vote in the allied control council.
Thus far, France has held out so! French
no agreement has been possible, . # n a MEANWHILE, the American authorities are going ahead and destroying materiel in their possession. eT AE
deNazifying its zone, Approximately ' 90,000 Nazi. and Nazi adherents have been arrested and are being detained pending trial. Another 125000 have been removed from office. Still more are
now-being- weeded out of - jobs in|
private employment, This is believed here to be a more thorough program of deNazi-
The U. 8. is also believed to be ahead in its program of reparations and restitution, * » » FOLLOWING the Potsdam agree-| ment on reparations, the Soviets]
War Wives Face Readjustment
filed claim: to 40 specific industrial plants in the American, British and
a ; NO PLAN of procedure has yet been worked out for reparations deliveries . f¥ém the western zones} to the Soviets. Agreement has been
80 ahead and deliver two plants)
The U. 8. is in favor of destroy-
WILLIAM A. O'BRIEN, M.D. HALF THE struggle for life is a struggle for food. Most of us spend much money for food as we do other life necessities. A low
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fication than any of the other ‘allies has carried out in its zone.
THE DOCTOR SAYS: Nutrition Aids Health, Success—
could teach her daughter all sne ‘needs to know about the prepara tion and serving of food. This would be satisfactory if there were no new developments in the field of nutrition. Nutrition education has been suecessful, as induction figures indicate all young men and women today are taller and heavier than their parents were when they were examined in world war I.
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to its customers. , ; amount excessive] Sth Armiered: On high seas. attributed to the company Infantry November, 1042. Son : On Sah sd. FPO accepted new schedules Jufaniey Camp Pitts rates by $5,110,000 com-| goth Infantry: In Le Havre stag£7088 Operating revenue ing area; ready date Nov. 28.
‘group in this list is based on the milk! cHild's age and activity and the
from its zone to the Russians, anyway, pending agreement,
One serving of meat, poultry, or fish, and one egg; 3. One serving of orange, grapefruit, or tomato juice, or raw cabbage and salad greens; 3. One serving of potatoes, two servings of other vegetables, including: 4. Green and yellow vegetables; 5. Liberal serving of bread and cereals (natural, whole-grain, or enriched): 6. Two squares of butter or fortified margarine; 7. One serving of codliver oil or other fish oil concen trates. Dally selection from each
family food budget.
2 U. S. Divisions Leave Paris on
Homeward Trip
PARIS, Nov. 8 (U. P)~Today'’s redeployment timetable of U. 8. army divisions: 75th Infantry-<In Marseilles staging area.
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