Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 13 December 1945 — Page 14

15 [World Trade Hampered by

‘Sterling Bloc Agreements {Continued From Page One) But obviously this system imposes : wis included. So wars POrugAl, | rere canny bor isn Commerce, : , ; browsers, Brown, , : : Tobbery was the latest in 1. X. Prask, Harry; sisisrar Mes. Jaland | pinced Mttls-2redence: today in g money to the British pound in 1932; - ; series of a dozen safecracking jobs| Punesn, James Raber, Oscar & man who said attack the United States or Sweden, Norway, Finland, Denmark | jam 1s secken oo Coul the log COUPE IS SOUGHT in the past three weeks. In most| Ties Mis Adtie Sel mea. [TU ENDO 6 CRC NUL the British or the Dutch.” and Estonia did so in 1983; and|" Tye preak-up must start with of them, the vaults were sprung on, 0. "U0 Sn x Mare: sons, |the state trouble” i Gen. Marshall replied that the/Iran and Latvia in 1936. the sterling bloc, because that! «Only the pressure of public opin- IN KIDNAPING CASE! “sees | Stanford, ©. B. . | The suspect, committed by information about a specific/ All these nations were doing a sealed-up system is the largest and|, "ue United States, forcing 8 Mac Davis of the Frederick ho-| sr, Louise Susong Sehwindiing, .|wife to the psychopathic hospitel, Was in intercepted Japanese nigh percentage of their trade with [its fences lie across most of the CHELSEA, Mass, Dee. 13 (0. po |, 400 EB Washington st. said he| survivors: Son, John P.; brothers, George, [created & lived period of messages instructing emissaries here [each ‘other and with Britain, so it| world’s trade channels, more humane treatment of the c > J:|was held up at gunpoint by two|andrew, John and Emil Schwindling, |ojtement last when he babbled to deliver at 1 p. m. Dec. 7 & note | was easier to do business in pounds| The chief purpose of the British |Jews in the displabed prison camps 85 he parked near the hotel| Mrs. Birdie Mary-Davis, 30. Survivors: | noonerently about the killing breaking off diplomatic negotia-|sterling than in any other currency.(loan is to translate the sterling |in Germany, as well as immigration a took his billfold Pegs, Mrs. Dorothy Porigen, Mrs.|oog police his sister-in-law I = tions. bloc balances into" enough dollars with: 341. ot couse, Mrs. Cors Wallets; sons, |. oo rtment 610 of the Pinecrest Following the outbreak of war, th ——————————— Earl, Charles; sister, Mrs. Thenes Smith. Neo Definite Information the sterling bloc changed. Most non- so that e sterling countries can PROSECUTORS OPEN William L. Anderson, 89. Survivars hotel, next to the apartment Asked if even this message sup- British nations left it, and decided [PUY the goods they must pay for in Wife, Dosh; daughter, Mrs. William Light. (Miss Brown was found shot plied “any definite information,” as|to shift for themselves. Britain in-|ollars. First they need machine CONVENTION HERE foot: sons Thomas, Sam; sisters, Mrs. |stabbed to death early Monday. “to what was going to happen next,|stituted rigid control, and the ster- | t00lS, raw materials, and foodstuffs or the Rov hy tra: James Hoover; broth- | police expressed doubt of so they can convert their factories 28 kidnaping by two witnesses| Hoosier prosecuting attorneys con- |": the Rev. W. T. Anderson. Gen. Marshall said, “not necessar-|ling area became a zone for ex- clared. sald they remembered 66. Survivors: Wife, | StOry, however, after the man's po” change control purposes. It acquired, make peacetime products andsell| (qn Marcus charges may be in- y Seeing vened here today for their annual Mabel; son, Don; sister, Mrs. lds said he had not béen out of - Gen. Marshall had reiterated|for the first time, the exact defini- tats abivnd agen, both inside and by the 13-man Anglo- oeting. i v0. home for the past two weeks. terday, under questioning by|tion which it can be given today. € ng ares. erican commission recently ap- pleted this <Heotaot ol vivors: Dasehtos. toe fon boty sur-| Meanwhile, investigators p. Prank B. Keefe (R. Wis.), that Fence of Control Some Have Dollars Pointed to look into the plight of|'"" o ". '\ l.., read) baRquet ba Wh Heid Mrs their inquiry into a mysterious the chief of staff held overall re- Movements of funds within the, Myth of thie Fade al » paid Jews in Europe and SHE qusson of e et was sp tonigh Bas Waltar Sut, Hela wy M =n phone Sa to Miss. Sruysre sponsibility for the fact that Pearl| or by countries already|Jewish immigration Palestine. ; or ANY nd Shirley ment Sunday con Harbor oo taken by surprise. British Commonwealth and the Em- |, .. dollars Over a long period] The U. 8. favors . large-scale |driven by a slim, dark complexioned dress te attorneys on his experi- Survives: naan. . Ravers: a | questioning of & stock butcher Rep. Keefe, concluding his ques./Pif® (except Oanada and New-io¢ tyme approximately 80 years—|Jewish immigration into Palestine. Sos 2 4 Sonera Jnvestiss- Ron: orother. James Noon: sister.| self-confessed sex offense tioning, asked Gen. Marshall today|0undland), British mandated ter-|ihe present British loan plan con-|It is opposed by the British, who Police. The first three numbers of He vii} no s Burope. | MU. Oh nora Rosette Bates, 86. Survi- The butcher, identified as about his Nov. 27, 1941, war warn. 'itories, British protectorates and|iempiates that enough surplus|control Palestine under a League the car's license were “723. - Ww moving pictures taken vor: Daughter Mrs. € Maurer, wite, | Catraboni, 40, told police he ing to Pacific commanders in which, | Protected states, Egypt, the Sudan, (gollars will accumulate from this|of Nations mandate. A man and a woman, whom the Principal Do ours banquet | Sar; son. Charles Hugh: daughters had served a jail term for ra at the orders of the late President Iraq, Iceland and the Faroe islands trade—once it gets under way—to| The senate foreign relations com- police did not identify, volunteered tomorrow no. a uet Mrs 5 Mrs, oe Cie sister, Mrs. | Buffalo, N. Y., and had been Roosevelt, they were told not to were free. But a fence of exchange repay our dollars at the rate of mittee yesterday approved & reso- the information about the mys- Gates and Eldon 8 13 by a atto ' tiohed in the Cleveland torso commit the first overt act. control, operated from London, was| about $100,000.00 per year. . |jution urging admission of Jews |terious couple last night. They did ney general of Kentucky. TWOWENSVILLE .. Mrs Grace Blanche|qery of 1937.43, Gen. Marshall said that Hawatian|Piaced around the entire area. It is| Under the loan plan, in theory,|into Palestine “to the maximum |D0S say why they had not disclosed|™¢Y ¥@ : daughton re. Wands Smith; mother.| John Dedrick, night clerk at defenders would have been justified there today. . the sterling bloc would gradually|of its agricultural and economic |it before. PAPER IS DE-INKED Mrs. Ella Massey, hotel, said Catraboni resembled in bombing Japanese carriers or| The governments inside the fence dissolve and the pound and dollarigpportunities” The restlution was| Mrs. Carlan was near a nervous| WASHINGTON—Salt, long used Survivors Hasband Rom Handel, 2. |“heavy-set, middle-aged” man shooting down Japanese planes if entered into an agreement to pool | would gradually dissolve and the|passed by a 17 to 1 majority. Com- | breakdown as the latest of eight|to presekve food, is a preservative Sarl’ Mrs. Minnie Runyon: |saw leaving the building at they had been sighted before the any money they got from outside) Pound and dollar would travel more|mitiee Chairman Tom Connally anonymous telephone calls de-|itself, but in addition, it draws |p Ee, ale O. Wiliam C. and Geors | 4 a. m. Monday. However, his Dec. 7 attack, despite. the Presi-|countries and send it to London. Or less freely across each oOther's|(D, Tex.) opposed ft. He said |manded that the Carlans raise $30,- | water, sugars, proteins and other| RUSEVILLE—Robert Philp Newman. 13 dential orders. In return, England agreed to parcel | boundaries in the world markets. president Truman “stated that the 000 ransom for the return of the nutrients from the food so that Survivors: Paeats, Mr und Mra Donald He sald the sudden, unexplained out their dollars and other curren-| But Britain is also Americas|passage of any resolution would [son, which Machinist's Mate 3-c|sugars may ferment to form acids|ard Wayne, Harold: sisters, Shoricy Aan, presence of carriers in Hawaiian cies where most needed in buying largest competitor in the world |greqtly embarrass him in his inter- James J. Carlan has néver seen. |that also act as preservatives. Mrs. Alice Wilder, Mra. Beverly'A. Bani: waters or Japanese planes over the markets. So, once the sterling bloc : i Alberts Porter.

essential imports for the sterling bloc area as a whole. Some nations, such as India, put more - dollars into England's pool than they used. Others were given more to spend than they supplied. Egypt, for example, sent England only a few dollars, but was able to make large purchases from us in| dollars because of the pool. Commerce Limitations It was the first allusion in the in-| By pooling their limited supplies’ vestigation to destruction inflicted{of dollars the sterling-area nations by she Japanese upon Gen. Douglas kept fewer dollars in reserve and ur's command. | therefore had more to spend than Gen, Marshall said he did not if each nation had.to have a sepknow if the war department had arate dollar reserve for essential such a report. | purchases in the United States.

is unfrozen and Britain is free to use her borrowed billions all over! the world the kind of competition! she gives us is important—to everyone of us.

island would have been an overt act in itself,

Asked About Clark Field

Benator Lucas questioned Gen. ‘Marshall as to whether the war department had any repdit on why bombers were destroyed on the ground at Clark field in the Philippines several hours after the Pear] Harbor attack.

TOMORROW: What happens when we face British nationalized industries subsidised by American dollars,

TELLS OF OFFER BY NAZIS TO SELL JEWS

(Continued From Page One)

would have to send the Jews to Germany before freeing them, “I can only sell the Hungarian Jews as from Germany,” he said. | Dr, Kastner said Alchmann told | ‘|nim to send a colleague, Eugene Brand, to Istanbul at once “and inform the Jews there that I am prepared to sell 1,000,000 Hungarian | Jews for good primary vehicles. 1 would transport them to Auchwits |

rl] ZR

cin

x

» | B=

:

; ifi

its; Mrs,

A man's ldea of Christmas!

Substantial and handsome gifts for men are a specialty with Rogers! We have assembled a big collection of fine pen and pencil sets, precision watches of famous make, a profusion of gold dress jeweiry, leather wallets, key cases and cigarette cases . . . besides that most wanted of all gifts; his favorite lodge ring! Our men's. gifts offer -a great variety of ideas from which to make the final perfect choice . . . come in tomorrow, while assortments are complete]

Famous Make

Lighters

Other documents disclosed that at one typical concentration camp, that at Flossenburg, 29.000 persons died including 13 American or Brit.

A captured gestapo order of March, 1944, disclosed that the Nazi high command ordered all escaped officer or non-commissioned prison. {ers of war except British or Americans turned over to 8. D, police for “step three.” * “Step three” was a Nasi euphemism. It meant Ei

—y,

RNS LOAN COA AN Tar,

LI-8498 L-1431

were taken in irons to Mathausen concentration camp for what they called “aktion kugel—operation bullet.”

Moathiy Tia 3% on balance A $150 Yeas add American and British prisoners $20 F 30 DAYS COSTS ONLY 60¢ were held until the supreme com- |

———

mand had decided on their disposal. | The gestapo was instructed to inform the international Red Cross in “step three” cases that the pris-

ee ee emer eta

Our Customers Toll Us We Have the HOUSE SLIPPER

VALUES

$0, Note a Few of the Styles, and the Prices, and Make Your Own

Comparisons

seeds fo meet. Deon segger (concentration camp) and put them | - ShAN he Bi food . . . on ice. If my generous offer is accepted I will release them all, If | por ama s og x not they will all be gamed” | Bm -nn The negotiations apparently broke pos, tans, ceding oa iar down because Kastner reported that | repairs duh Sermenty, Sashes or by June 27, 1044, 475000 Jews | Sh pn The had been deported to Nas concena 0 bel tration camps from Hungary. =~ the money when you resch 29,000 Died

‘1.00 ve

| Men's Dress Jewelry ~ ® Key Chains —$3.50 Up * Cuf Links —$5.00 Up * Money Clipe—$4.00 Up _- Identification Bracelets—$9.00 Up

* Collar Pins —50¢c Up

GIFTS IN LEATHER * Cigarette Cases —$2.95 Up * Bill Folds —$2.95 Up _I% * Key Cases —$2.50 Up 4885

* Birthstone. Rings —$14.75 Up

FINE WATCHES

FOR MEN OF AFFAIRS

Famous names, favorite modetn designs, pracision : movements and spacial aor, Come in early, " because watches of quality get snapped up + ® Tie Bar —$3.00 Up quickly! it mie X - 9

a 1245 uP

| Fraternal Rings

H

3

Fe

i

® Knights of Pythiss

* Masonic :

J »

f Li “ Lo 2 o : Cea tl “itd fy ¢ igh IND $7750 rmanN- $A i A fe ho A a te, : wo pe fi f » :

1)

-~

a Ey, TERT

rl as

FARR ie SER el

BAUE

. - — Wife and - . Repatri # Two attornt Bauer sped to a race to reac to attend a “ for 8, Sgt. Fre Bauer, form

ported back Aor allegedly « a spy in 1941, * Pollowing © “play ‘here Tu to Detroit by cer. His atton Yin and R. M. ‘by the time th en route east Yollowed. Citizen: s J. BE. Gardi Aorney who rt Appeared the geant had al of his citizen: Wilma «Bau intained 1! A, left fo hight last nig JSovernment Ww “rush act.” , . Bauer adm as an espion he then dou He was held | Harrison for t

{ HURRY

charged this v

N.D, ST $000-}

i