Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 10 December 1945 — Page 10

[Honored Queen [STATE FOOD GOALS

"Air Chief May Also Write "Pieces for Paper.

By PAUL R. LEACH * Times Foreign Correspondent - WASHINGTON, Dec. 10.—A country editor in northern California is * likely: to become famous ere jong because Gen. H. H. Arnold, army air forces chief, is retiring Jan. 1. “There is a live oak on my place at Sonoma,” Gen. Arnold said. “I am going there soon and sit under it. For nearly 44 years I have been doing what people told me. to do. T'm going to be ‘Hap’ Arnold for a while,” “But can you be content, after building up the world's greatest air force since a year ago today, to sit under that tree and do nothing else?” Arnold was asked. May Write Editorials “well.” said the gengral, with the undimmed Arnold twinkle, “I have a deal with Walter Murphy, editor of the Sonoma Index-Tribune. 1 asked him if he'd print ideas of mine—fust a little piece on his editorial page now and then, about ‘so big,” measuring four or five inches—"if I had any ideas and wrote them for him. “Murphy told me he would.” “Hap” Arnold is as full of ideas as a pre-war Christmas bun is of raisins. He wants this country to keep ahead of the world—or at least on a par with it—in its air force. He wants scientific development encouraged, the army to pick bright young men in that field as it picks] West Point officers. Prepare Tor Peace He wants industrial production and the air force to go along togethef, He wants the U. 8. to prepare for peace instead of war—and to keep the peace. “What else are you going to do| at your Sonoma place?” he was| asked. | “Well, there's an old buck deer, who has a wallow there. I'm going to watch him. There's-a- flock of white tails acroés ‘the valley, And | the place is alive with ‘quail’ “But you wouldn't shoot those white tails and: quail =, .?” Will Shoot Planes “The hell T wouldn't,” Arnold exploded. “The buck and I are old [riends, though.” “Anything else?” “Yes,” Hap grinned, almost out ‘oud. I've got captured Jap guns. Jap ammunition for them too. And “m going to sit out there under ‘hat tree watching for that buck ind those quail and if any. Amercan airplanes appear over my slace—any airplanes—I'm going to hoot at them.”

To Be Installed |

JANE LEPPERT, 1102 Newman Indiana's food production goals st, will be Installed as honored iL... you5 ‘wii be set at a special queen of Bethel 4, Order of Job's meeting Déc.. 19 at the Severin Daughters, in services Saturday. :

er olfjcess of the state production and mar-

t keting administration, said today. . § Suis The meeting . will include repreprincess; Hilda | sentatives of the State USDA counMeadows, junior cil, successor to the state agriculprincess; Ger- |tUral war board; state AAA comaldine Powell, |mittee, Purdue university, Indiana * guide; Gerald- Canners" association, State Grange ine Gasho, and various federal agencies conmarshal; Dollie {cerned with food production ' and Stapanovie, distribution. ; chaplain; Mary Mr. Vogler will preside at the. sesJane Leppert "oles re. |SiOD, beginning at 10 a. m. with a corder; Doris Prather, musician; talk by R. H. Baumann, agriculNorma Brown, librarian; Roselyn tural extension economist from PurOttig, 1st messenger; Betty Oz- due, on the outlook for Indiana ment, 2d messenger; Mary Ellen [Agriculture in the coming year. L. Lehr, 3d messenger; Donna Lee E. Hoffman, associate state director White, 4th messenger; Joan Small, - of agricultural extension for the 5th messenger; Betty. Lou Poland, |university, will talk briefly on the treasurer; Mary Ann White, Silional and state . agricultural senior custodian; Peggy White, goals. junior custodian; Lois Dakin, Suggested national food producinner guard, and Joan Peterson, |ton goals announced recently in| outer guard. { Washington showed little change in|

Jnstalling officers, will be:

Jeanne Perry, installing chap- tionwide reduction In poultry. lain; Betty Smock, guide; Vera Nell Smock marshal; Martha jare being sent from Washington. Rearick, senior custodian; Betty [They may be accepted or revised) Wicks, junior custodian; Keran, recorder; Mrs. musician, soloist.

T0-BE SET DEC. 19

Rooker, [held see fit.

Copyright, 1045, by The Indianapolis Times |

and The Chicago Daily News, Inc,

Streicher's- Frau

Now Scrubwoman

Times Foreign Service |

NUERNBERG, Dec. 10.—Julius/ Streicher’s 39-year-old bride, Adele, is having trouble corresponding with the celebrated exponent of! anti-Semitism, | Once a week she has been de-| siting a letter for him at the ralace of justice here and collects ng one that he writes her from | the prison where he. and other Nazi defendants are being held | during the war crimes trial. | But the frau, who married Streicher last spring, complains hat lately she has been unable to et time off from work to make he trip to the courthouse. Her | present job: Scrubwoman in al Jewish displaced persons camp. |

ROACH WINS HOWE | PRACTICE ELECTION

Ronald -Roach, “Nationalist,” was | } lected governor of the “state of | Howe” In the recent annual mock | lection at Howe high school, Jo- | ieph Foerderer was elected lieuten- | Jit governor, | The election ended a month of | velitieal and election activities for ill members of the government, hisory and social studies classes. Prie naries in each class were held sevral weeks ago and political convene ions to nominate state officers were carried on. Other officers elected were: Car] Edwards, secretary of state; Darger, treasurer: Paul Eicher, addi ard King, superintendent of pubit instruction; Jim Hill, attorney general 01s ‘Brenn, recorder; Josephine Justice, lerk: Ronald Maloof, Mary Alice Kirkwin. Mary Jane Hill. Stanley Walter and Peggy Millen, judges of the supreme court, and Jim Jacobs, Janis Heithecker. Harold Reed, Alfred Purcell, Loren Stackhouse and

Barbara Brown, - judges of the appellate court

UNIVERSAL CLUB TO | AID SALVATION ARMY

Members of the Universal club have volunteered to ring bells at Salvation army Christmas Kettles | again this year, according to Brigadier James Fookes, army divisioiial , secretary. - ‘Some’ 75 to 80 club members will serve next Saturday, marking the| fourth - consscutive year the. club has participated in the Salvation army's Christinas campaign. , William Ebaugh, Universal club president, has appointed Virgil Gebauer and William Shepard as a committee to arrange details, : Proceeds from the kettles go to providing a Christmas party for under-privileged children.

SENIOR SCOUT BALL |

|hotel, L. Marshall Vogler, director]

major farm products asked for wabash, state field director of the Advanced, it was stated, since all {1946, except for a 17 per cent ha- Woman's Benefit association, at a! redeployed troops are scheduled to |luncheon at 1 p.m. Thursday at leave France by March 1. Tentative figures for each state Catherine's restaurant, 1435 N. Me-

Helen |as the state conferences now being | Meredith's 50 years of association 21,000 public health nurses are now From these state ‘fig- service will be followed by a proand Beatrice Johnson, | ures the goals for the entire nation gram. ‘will be finally determined. |

Detroit Man to [YANKS T0 CLEAR [Miami Prepares for Record Season of peak on Safety! FRANCE BY JLY ~~ Crowded Casinos and Heavy Spending.

DAVID T. MOULD Mich.. will address the Industrial Safety club of Indianapolis Chamber of Commerce Safety council at a dinner meeting tomorrow at the Lincoln. Mr. Mould, who is safety " director of 115 General Motors Corp, plants will speak on “Accident Prevention—a MaJor Activity with General Motors,” according to John Q. Kirkpatrick, president of the local safety club, - The annual election of club officers will be held at this meet

to $10, and the remainder upward [than $25,000,000 on the greyhounds. With thousands of wintér visitors. from both the east and west coasts be tremendously ine creased this winter. The Gulfstream race track opened its season Dec. 1 with a mutuel play in excess of $800,000. Probably over 100 millions will ga. through’ the machines’ at this track, Tropical Park and Hialeah. : - Restrictions on fishing craft have been removed by the navy, and sportsmen will battle with marlin and other big gamesters to their heart's content. . Plenty of Spoct Big gOlfing events are the $10,000 Miami opén and the international four ball matches. Touring profese

sionals will also play in other toure naments throughout the state. . All “courses have been given -& barbering and face lifting for the benefit of the average player. Bradley’s Palm Beach spot in chi-| No phase of the sporting scene chi and extravagance are already|has been overlooked. Air races, operating er preparing to open, [fishing and sailing regattas, tennis, In Dade county, which includes|jal alai and big league basebail Miami and Miami Beach, there are (teams are all on the agenda. the remaining hotels to their own-|the usual promises to clamp down ers, there will be 1500 more roomsion the spinning wheels and rolling available in Miami and“ 4600 .0n the | dice, but no one seems quite sure Beach. these promises will be kept. OPA holds ceiling prices at cur-| Legalized gambling will top all |ing some 80 per cent of safrole, jemployed in the United States, ap-|rent levels. Approximately 40 per records. Throughout Florida in a|which closely resembles the product The stated dinner and card| proximately one public health nurse cent of these rooms will rent at $6 total of 344 nights of summer rac-|formerly obtained by American cos party for Thursday will not be held. for every 8300 population a day, 30 per cent from that point ing at six tracks fans bet more! metic manufacturers from Japan.

PARIS, Dec. 10—All U. 8. army| MIAMI, Fla, Dec. ‘10. forces in Prance, except a few|and Miami Beach, having Heliel| W $21; WH 18 {06 saint. . ; : course, there are luxury pent. liaison groups, will have evacuated navy blue and army khaki for the and “With enc clits total will this country by next July 1, ending first time In four years, face thel . .... put no more than rp total a stay that began when th beaches| gayest, noisiest and most congested to satisfy those with swollen bank of Normandy were stormed in June,|season in story. ~ i accounts. z This is not Chamber of Com- a 1944. oy Orders to consolidate redeploy-| merce ballyhoo. It is fact. Gatling 1s Basis ment activities have been issued to- For the visitor it can be a Gold Night life has always been one day at army headquarters here, | Coast saturnalia of spending or ajof .the outstanding féatures of Five bases in this sector, which|Teasonably priced winter vacation, Miami's “June in January” season. include. the Marseilles delta base, the Sépending on his pocketbook and This year it will approach the Chanor base, the Brussels-Antwerp 4 ; h transportation is by no|fabulous. section, the Oise intermediate base] THOUS Po y Yast -amounis have. 3 spent

Seine sec-| Means normal, the bottleneck has ! Jstion id the Le Have one ee been eased. Railroads and bus lines/enlarging and | decorating the

Frene are adding new equipment. There clubs. Some of the most famous Bie to Ie valled eX ens buss will be more “planes. With gas/performers. in show business altion is Jan. 15, it was learned. There | "ationing over, and the possibility ready have been contracted .at will still be a headquarters in Paris, of obtaining new tires in the near|salaries ranging from $2500 a week but the main headquarters will be| future. Shouts hot rate} in Ssh NO ion oF ia xplnatod’. iF own cars as e e . at at Frankfurt, Germany. y pas r

1g; Mr. BEkpatilex anuuunced, After July 1, 1946, all U. 8. sol- Prices Are Limited FIDELITY REVIEW TO | i go direct to Bre. {ony 6s per cent’ occupied at this HONOR FIELD WORKER men and French harbors will bejtime, though there is very heavy aCe Re 10, YL ry Target day may even els rooms in Miami and 11500 n We Sea navy and army return

BRAZIL PRODUCES SAFROLB WASHINGTON — Brazil is proe ducing an oil of sassafras, containe

21,000 PUBLIC NURSES WASHINGTON—A total of nearly

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* Avie NEW YOR lately of the TC Group, gri Aeronca Chief “How'd it § “Great!” 's great! And it The ex-sel plied the a portant questi of light plane tributors, flyir the airplane The ques to happen to boys who hav ful two and ports and ‘bor rific fighters forces and fled, with the Piper Cubs, E Fairchilds and