Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 14 November 1945 — Page 2

5 a 5

V.

_ afnindt labor and management for

wage squabbles which have ham.

__pered - farm reconversion. _ + Blames Labor, Management .__:%7 think the farmers of Indiana ~ apd America have every right to. be + incensed at both labor and management for holding up reconver- © sion,” Hdssil Schenck, president of the state farm bureau, said today. 8 "“The present labor-management © tie-up is one of the greatest curses = of our nation today. With the world at peace riow, farmers have to contend with economic warfare at home,” he continued, ‘“Don’t ever forget,” he reminded, “that the American farmer is the

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bbund to be hurt by this tie-up.” : Tells ‘of Surpluses

1 The farm bureau executive feels

that surpluses in farm goods to a

I necessary restrictions on the

"* amounts of surpius items produced.

Parmers may recognize this problem I” "immediately by passing a resolution . gomcerning limits on production of | farmers face is that they are | geared to high production and are

power of Schenck said : that the farmers can relax

biggest buyer of industrial goods in the’ United States and theyre

Mr. Schenk, also outlined briefly: the major problems which state]

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decreased market will again make! 27

“BARBARA JEAN” has been identified and at least one parent found. Seeing the picture of a baby in the newspaper, Jairus Sweitzer, 2434 Brookside ave, went to the heme at 1619 College ave. where the child was left two weeks ago on Oct. 28 by her mother, and identified her as Barbara Ann Sweitzer, his child. . The mother who left the child at the home of Mrs. Willlam Mar-

|and expensive period of trying to

get their fences, machinery, lands

“land buildings back into good con-

dition. : Mr. Schenk, who has become a figure in national and international farm affairs while president of the

bureau, is believed to be unopposed

for, the: presidency. So far, observ~ ers say, no one has been mentioned as a possible successor to him. 4000 Expected Here The president has been unopposed at every convention since he was elevated from the vice presidency in 1935. A member of the board of directors of the‘ American Farm Bureau, he also is on the executive committee of the national group. This summer he was picked as one of the official United States delegates to the third Inter-Ameri-can agricultural - conference in

Venezuela. wa; “More than 4000 farmers and their families are expected to come to Indianapolis = during two days of lecture sessions and programs which

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tin never returned and after 18 days the baby was placed in the Marion County Guardians’ Home. Sweitzer said the child was two years and two months old and he presumed his wife had lacked the money to pay the board for little Barbara. A truck-driver, Sweitzer was out of town the last few days, he said. . Police are trying“to locate MarJorie Sweitzer, the mother of th child. . ’ will precede the business session Saturday.

Headline speakers at the sessions,

which will be held all day Thurs day and Friday at the Murat Temple, will inciude Gov. Gates, Undersecretary of Agriculture J. B. Hutson; H. E. Babcock, chairman of Cornell university. board of trustees; Dr. Mary Mims, of Louisiana State university, and Dr. George D. Scarseth, formerly of Purdue and now director of the American Farm Research association. In addition to resolutions- and election of officers, the official delegate body will elect delegates to the national convention the k of Dec. 17 at the business séssion Saturday, £5

BENDIX STRIKE VOTED

SOUTH BEND, Nov, 14 (U, P).~ By a majority vote of more than five to one, Bendix local 9 of the United Auto Workers ©. I ©) has authorized a strike, the Na. tional Labor Relations Board ane nounced today. ;

JU. S. Forces’ Put Chinese

Ashore at Tsingtao. (Continued From Page One) shek’s Nationalist troops into the

battle of China's undeclared civil

line-ups, although at least part of the 8th route army was reported to have been pulled out some time ago

{to reinforce the Communist de- | fenses of Manchuria.

"The Nationalists, under Lt. Gen. Tang Peng, were picked veterans of the long campaigns against the Japanese in south China. Johnston said they went ashore without tanks or heavy artillery, but were wellequipped with American small arms, mortars, flame-throwers and besookas. Barbey, Shepherd Supervises Vice Adm. Daniel C. Barbey, com« mander of U. 8. amphibious forces | in north China, snd Maj. Gen. Lemuel C. Shepherd, commander of the 6th marines, were on hand to

WAT. controlled all the peninsula ports) &

supervise the landing. The Na-| tionalistt army, rushed up from | Kowloon to occupy Shantung for) Chiang’s government, was expected | to complete its debarkation before daybreak Thursday. - ~ Both sides appedred anxious to avold embroiling. the marines in their civil war and observers believed there would be ne major clash until the Nationalists were clear ‘of the ‘city. The situation was complicated, however, by the presence of an || undisclosed number of Japanese troops who had been permitted to keep their arms to guard the railway line running inland from Tsingtao. Others Land in North The Tsingtao landing coincided with. the arrival of another Chi- | nese government army-the 53d some 280 miles farther north at Chinwangtao, nine miles south of the embattled Manchurian gateway town of 'Shanhailkwan. haikwan, eastern terminus of China's great wall, already had

fallen to the Nationalists, opening

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