Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 31 December 1945 — Page 9
sailor who didn't miss getting home for Christmas because of bad wedther and crowded trains. A radio-
bury st. . . . The trip was about 72 miles and the . fare $17.50 or a little more than 24 cents a mile.
.and then go to Notre Dame university. in England he met the Eckharts’ son, Boots. Cpl Eckhart 18 now in France. . ;
Haste, or Shirt Shortage?
BASCOL HILL, 229 E. Minnesota st. appeared at work at E. C. Atkins the other day in a new kind of work outfit. He had dressed in such a hurry that he forgot to put on a shirt. He was still wearing the top of, his pajamas. . .. Snow and ice in Greenwood disguised the street so much last week that it looked like any normal street. But a Polk's milkman ~~jearned differently. All at once his truck dropped into a hole in the street. Workers had dug the hole to get to the sewer and it hadn't been covered up. ! ck had to be lifted out. . . . Mrs. R. L. Auten, a West side resident, says she read about the cham-’ pion Manx ‘cat in Wednesday's Times and wonders where she can get a Manx cat for a pet. She has called every pet shop, pedigreed cat authorities and even dog kennels but no one seems to know who might have a Manx kitten. Mrs. Auten has some special reasons for wanting this particular type of
Frank (Tony) Cassiero . . . he didn't let the transportation tie-up stop his home-coming. Tall Tale, But True!
MRS. FRANCIS POUDER, 5539 Guilford ave., re--turned to Indianapolis this week with a fish story
SECOND SECTION
. By 8, BURTON HEATH NEA Staff Writer
NEW YORK, Dec. 31.— Jan. 15 is the last day on which millions of Americans can file final estimates and complete their preliminary payments on the income tax that they will owe next March 15. Probably “less than 10 per cent of income tax payers have to do anything by Jan. 15, ‘reasury experts estimate. It is up to each person to determine whether or not he belongs to that 10 per cent. In general there are three groups whe should get busy at once on their Jan. 15 estimates. They are. _ 1. Farmers.
that any fisherman would like to tell. And it's a true
story, too. She and her husband were vacationing | in Tavernier, Pla. for about a month and did quite a bit of fishing. Mrs. Pouder caught a sailfish that | ost twice as big as she. It was eight feet long. | . . Loss of her purse may cause Miss Anna C. Bren-| nan,” 1120 N. Pennsylvania st. apt. 124, to lose several days’ work. She is a teacher in junior high school and was carrying her glasses in her handbag Dec. 20. She and three other women were waiting on a trolley at Pennsylvania and Market sts. when a kind gentleman offered to give them a ride. Miss Brennan believes her purse slid off her lap when she got out of the car at her apartment. It contained her glasses, a fountain pen, a book of war stamps and a few other articles. Miss Brennan can be contacted at RI. 6044.
cat. She has owned two part-Manx cats before and was very fond of them. And, she says, the Manx cais are much better for children. They have hardly any tail and little tots can't grab them by the tail as they. tend to do to long-tailed cats. The Manx cat has another characteristic different from th of an ordinary alley cat. It runs like a rabbit. also has a slightly heavier coat of fur. Mrs. Autén doesn’t want the pet immediately ‘since she ho move into a larger home where she can care for the cat better. But she'd like to know just where she can get one when she wants it. In a few months she hopes to own both a dog and a Manx cat. The cat which Mrs. Auten read about jn The Times was Ginger, a champion Manx from Glen Ellyn, II, entered in thé 34th annual show of the Beresford Cat club in Chicago.
Synthetic Fuels
WASHINGTON, Dec. 31.—Getting gasoline and oil out of coal will be the new operation of the $17,500,000 Missouri ordnance works that made synthetic ammonia during the war. Located at Louisiana, Mo., less than 100 miles north of St. Louis on the Mississippi river, the plant will be an important part of the government’s $30,000,000 experiment to develop synthetic fuels. It is hoped this plant will supply the answer to America's vanishing petroleum reserves. "Bureau of mines will operate it and conduct the experiments. . Findings will be given to private industry when the time comes that oil reserves are so short that it is profitable to make synthetic fuels. The plant will also be used to give industry the “know how” of production in case of a national emergency. U. 8, scientists have been studying the confiscated German synthetic fuel plants carefully. Under the necessity of war the Germans had made great Brides in the synthetic fuel industry.
Most Modern of Kind
BUREAU OF MINE engineers plan to add everything the Germans developed in the manufacturing * process of these fuels to what the British and Americans discovered. This will make the Missouri plant the most modefn of its kind in the world. “Similarity between the manufactliring of synthetic ammonia and synthetic fuels is the reason Yate plant was selected by the bureau. There will be a minimum amount of chatige necessaly in the plant's facilities. Also it is close to the "best coal producing states. (Fests will be made with two distinct manufacturing processes. Each ‘unit is expected to have a “dally
Aviation
~ PARMINGDALE, LI; _ Dec. 31. ~A new sky glant, capable of flying nearly eight miles high at. speeds comparable to world war II fighter planes and aimed to fill the need for air policing by United Nations =~ ‘ "forces, was announced today by Refi Aviation ’ Corp. with army approval. or ‘own as the XF-12, the: giant is a photo recon--naissance aircraft, virtually a flying laboratory nearly 100 feet long and with a wing-spread of 129 fest. ~ It #8 powered with four Pratt. & Whitney Wasdp7. Major engines of 3000-horsepower each and utilizing combined exhaust from’ cylinders for added propulsion. Under secret -development for two years for the air technical service command, the XP-12 ; A8 capable of éxtremely “long-range reconnaissance photographic missions which no plane, to date, has been able to perform. . : development offers a fair dea or What Repub- = s upcoming Rainbow air transport, protstype of
By Douglas Larsen
capacity of 200 barrels of oil or the primary products, which include gasoline and wax as well as light and heavy oils. One .process reduces coal to a liquid by heating and adding certain chemicals and gases. The gasoline produced in this way has a fairly high octane number without further processing.
This process was used by the Germans as their . chief source of aviation fuel. One ton of coal will yield up to 70 or 80 gallons of gasoline and, at the same time, supply all the power and heat needed to | operate the plant,
Coal Turned Into Gas
THE SECOND process first turns th 2 coal into a gas by baking it. It yields the same approximate amount of fuel and in addition a superior grade of diesel oil and various products which can be refined into synthetic rubber, alcohols, fatty acids, soaps and edible fats such as margarine, |
- Synthetic fuels from coal and oil-shale cannot compete with natural petroleum anywhere under current prices. But research ultimately is expected to reduce costs. Cost reductions are among the objec- | “tives .of the bureau's program. It is not expected that the supply of coal will run -gut.-very ‘soon.. The bureau of mines estimates that the United States has about three trillion tons of | coal reserves—enough to supply the nation with both solid and liquid fuels for at least 1000 years. Other installations in the buresus- program include the coal research .and development laboratory at Bruceton, Pa.; and oil-shale demonstration plant near Rifle, Colo., and an oil-shale.. Tesearoh--and Qevelopment Mboratory at Larami€, Wyo.
)-
. STOP
g
#y +A
Gi i
Max B. Coo
-
k
Streamiined profs of the new. Republi
providing ‘perfectly accurate photographic ‘maps, Complete radar and radio equipnient, armor plate and flash bulbs for night photography will be carried as will dark room equipment for storing and loading film,
Alfred Marchev, president of Republic, sald today 4 that the plane represents a stage of development | | Be ra going to offer in global routs fying hat Waa 1, Sonsidsred possible prior to just one when it starts coming off the production lines: ~The Sin, Rainbow, it is announced, will fiy at better han 200 Conception May Change miles” per hour at 40,000 feet; with a. range of 4000_ ‘miles. Po
Engine Size of aPitie AN TDEA of the size of the big XP-12 can_be “gained from the fact that each. engine nacelle atés “the size. of Republic's famed P-47 Thunderbolt, a seven and ohe-half-ton fighter. ~~ Thig tip of:its tail (vertical stabilizer) is 30 feet “from” the ground. Its four-bladed - Curtiss-Wright _single-rotation , Propellers are 16 feet, 2- inches from tip to tip. And there ‘are fwo General—Electric tutbesuperchargers for gach of the four "huge en-
gines.
caused “many high military officials to “state that, while ‘the air forces of the futufe may change the Dpseent conception of combéit types, there can Never “Bé » dwindling «of. the need Jor. reconnaissance and "troop carrier planes. = . ~“We'll still want to know where the enemy: is god what he is doing, and apparently no-long range missiles or pilotless craft have been dey can fill that need.
“The XP-12 isan experimental airplane, right now, : ty comers stations are provided. They include and we intend to keep on trying to make better niodels | . one vertical, one split vertical One tri-metrogen, . and designs of it, because in the unfortunate event | One vertical view nde Wo is provided. Thus of another conflict, or in -air-policing necessary by | plane, flying at 40,000 feet, can photograph United Nagions forces, military intelligence will be | of jiguare miles of the earth, while following required Ni“larger degree than ever r before. has been | the earth at fixed altitfdes, thus possible.” — {4
»
re - pr
By Eleandr Roosevelt
I am thankful beyond “briefing,” since I need 16 1m the worst posits “way. "1 know _that I.will not only -lsten avidly to every
ERI Ey
Many. times betors have 1 strtaa_slens on one who has information to impart, but If any read. -~~the children. Or I have seen off > ing is suggested I shall be searching around for the various members of the family books recommended and trying to find spare mv. SHthe ; Siuiaely OF 4) so d ments in which I can sit in peace and quiet and pertain things are inevitable as a I am grateful now that so many years ago [ * prelude fo a long journey, or even _ived-eveni for brief. periods in families of different a short one, if it is across the | types in various European countries. 1 am glad water. . LL | that through the years I have kept In touch with : We all of us seem tO become a number of them, ning must be in erder before we contacts, I have tried to keep in the forefront of take a trip abroad. If we have my mind a picture of the life of the, people 1 have Bevis to dry put iin shay known. The bombastic pronouncements of some of must de and signed before their ‘leaders and the very evident faults of some we go. It : work Fett Wverments oud not change the people "It seems to me it will be more necessary now. - to remember the peoples and what they are like in of than to remember the
| attack, * this message was sent.
2. Those who should have filed an estimate previously, but let it slide. 3. Those who filed earlier, but . whose incomes
exceeded estimates materially (or slumped off badly) so that they must make,
their
up a deficit or, in reverse, who want to avoid a final payment to which they are committed unless they revise the earlier estimate.
MONDAY, DECEMBER 31, 1
Withholding Tax Table
Starting tomorrow your employer will withhold less from your pay than he has been doing under the old tai law. : ae Some 12 million low-income persons who were taxed under the 1945 rates will pay no tax in 1946. The other 35 million salary earners will _have- their burden eased . -as_shown by this table which compares the withholding tax under the new law and the old:
Weekly 1 Exemption 2 Exemptions 4 Exemptions Wage Old New old New Old New $11 20 10 00 00 .00 00 13 1.00 .80 10 00 10 00 20 2.00 1.70 .30 .00 .30 00 25 3.10 2.50 1.10 70 40 .00 30 4.10 3.40 2.20 1.60 50 .00 { 40 6.20 5.10 4.20 3.30 .80 00 { 50 8.20 6.80 6.30 5.00 2.50 1.30 60 10.60 8.70 8.50 6.80 4.60 3.10 70 12.80 10.60 10.70 8.60 6.70 4.80 80 15.10 12.50 12.80 10.50 8.80 6.50 90 17.30 14.40 1520 1240 11.00 8.30 100 19.90 16.50 17.80 14.50 13.50 10.50 125 25.50 21.20 23.40 19.20 19.20 15.20 150 31.70 26.40 29.60 24.40 25.40 20.40 200 41.80 34.90 39.70 32.90 35.50 28.80
THE PURPOSE’ of the estimate | is to assure that, not later than Jan. 15, you shall have paid at | least 80 per cent of the entire tax | that you will owe on 1945 income If you pass Jan. 15 delinquent by more than 20 per cent, you will be
No estimate is required from wage earners who received, in 1945, less than $5000 plus $500 for each personal exemption other than their own, and who did not have more than $100 of income other than- from wages, salary,
945
THOSE DAYS ARE HERE AGAIN: Check Up On 1945 Income—
Income Tax Estimate D Due Jan: 15
total income was under $500, the amount from non-wage sources does not matter.) ‘ ss ss,» NO NEW estimate is required from anybody who already has fixed one in which he guessed his tax at least 80 per cent of what it is going to be. If you over-estimated your tax in a previous declaration, and have a final Jnstallment to pay Jan. 15 on the éXcess, you should revise the estimate so as to cut | down the over-payment for which you must claim and then wait for a refund. If you fille a new estimate Jan. 15, you must send with it the difference between what you already have paid through withholdings and what you estimate you will owe March 15. . ” » IF YOU file a revised estimate Jan. 15, you must send with it enough, with witholdings and previous payments, to complete payment of the tax you guess that you will owe March 15. Unless you are certain that your final tax will come within 20 per cent of being fully paid, as of Jan. 15, through witholdings or payments or both, you should
very accurate estimate, so as to know where you stand. The surest way is by preparing your final return now and filing
subject to penalty. commissions, tps, ete. (If the
it in place of the final estimate.
WHO WAS RESPONSIBLE? The Fog Still Remains — Pearl Harbor Question Unanswered
By PAUL
) Times Special Writer VW ASHINGTON, Dec. :31.—Who was responsible for the Pearl Harbor tragedy four years ago? That big question remains to be answered as the congressional Investigation committee begins its final 30 days of hearings.
spite a mountain of testimon
of failure in duty by Adm. Kimmel termined by their coming testimony.
“It may never be clearly settled, especially since the committee will undoubtedly divide on party lines in its ultimate reports. o - . FOG STILL remains around the meaning of the decoded Jap mes-
| sages and their use.
Completely in the air is whether the “East Winds, Rain" message was {ever received to tell this country on | Dee. 4 Japan was going to. war against us. Unproved fire extrémist assertions that - President Roosevelt and hig cabinet knew when and where the Jap attack was coming, that they provoked it, then maneuvered to lay the blame on Kimmel and Short. 2 ‘mw . HERE ARE some of the more | Qutstanding charges, mainly by Senator ‘ Brewster (Me.) .gnd Reps. [Gearhart (Cal) and Keefe (Wis), lan Republicans, and evidence submitted. to date: Gearhart and Keefe charge: On Nov. 5, 1941, Tokyo told its
diplomats abroad -to listen for al weather broadcast in which “Bast | Wind®, Rain” would mean war with apparent the U. 8, Britain and Holland,
peace with Russia On Dec. 4, three days before the It was “In American hands Dec. 5. x » 7 . ‘ EVIDENCE before committ The army's Pearl Harbor
navy ‘had received the ° ‘Winds Activate” message on. Dec. 4, that it was not given to the army, that it has since disappeared from nay
aim. Leigh ‘Noyes. 1941 chief of--
naval communications, told. the committee it had never been re~| ceived: — Gen. Marshall told the committee
“THE Important thing to remember about this the had knowledge of the original | : plane, " continued Mr, Marchov, “is that the ending | “winds” plan, but no- knowledge 40 years of age hds gallstones; 3 is pickles, and radishes are trouble. "of the war, with weapofis never before devised, has that the “Winds Execute” Message not sq comimion in men.
was ever sent. ) . ..n >» GEARHART and Keefe charge: Navy Captain, Alwin D. Kramer, 1941 attache of ‘naval intelligence, | was “badgered and beset” by the’ -
{navy to change his testimony, which | . that [will have important bearirig on-mes- |
| sages taken to the White House by | Kramer, ; Kramer was held I TN
in the naval hospital psychopathic)
res oy
ward here, 3 Kramer to reporters:Never badgered’ nor beset, was not in psychopathic ward,
- lo "Kramer is yet to be called as al
witness.
BREWSTER charges was. sent | ; to! have officers enange tres Pearl | Harbor testimony. gi yen th , original | Roberts’ investigating committee.
: Reply: Army staff has this. It is es 10 be proved ore committee. ed . atu G
Sram: Ships at Pearl Harbor had Jase tight compartments open and a
No direct evidence yet brought! before committee, Gearhart charges: Everybody in authority in Wash-
the Japs had broken relations following the decoding of the 14th paragraph, a message to their ambassadors
R. LEACH GEN. MILES’ testimony: No special significance was attached to Pearl Harbor’ by the Japs’ mapping because decoded messages showed the Japs were interested in all U. 8. ships, as well as the Panama Canal, the west coast, the Philippines, and British territory. Miles admitted later to the committee that “hindsight” pointed to trouble at Oahu. Gen. Marshall's testimony: He had not expected an attack at Oahu.
y and exhibits, the original question and Lt. Gen. Short may only be de-
| were not advised of this crisis until [too late.
BY I GEARHART charges: The. Japs were doing everything in their power (in Washington) to
TESTIMONY by Adm. Wilkinson, chief of naval intelligence in 1941: Adm. Stark, then chief of naval | operations, had this 14th paragraph
(at 9:15 a. m, Dec. 7, and delayed got slapped in the face.
get an acceptable agreement and!
On Dec. 6 President Roosevelt sent an appeal to the emperor to avert tragic possibilities. On Dec. 7 the Japs struck.” - . . GEARHART charges: We were actually at war before the Japs struck. (No evdence submitted to the effect.) Gearhart charges: The Cruiser Bdtse sighted the at.
- [tacking Jap ships but made no re-
port because it was ordered to keep radio silence.
Navy department reply through Adm, Nimits: The Boise was 1400 miles away from the tay route.
try before that date to make a |
We, the We Schools Must Bid Higher to Get Girls Back
By RUTH MILLETT
a considerable number of their young up-and-coming women teachers to industry, to the Red Cross, the WACs, WAVES and SPARS. Already a lot of those young women are facing the problem of whether of not to go back to the class‘room, now ‘that the war is over. The answer is going to be “No” in far too many cases unless the schools make a real bid for them. Towns
where school boards by dictating what she can and cannot do in her private life aren't likely to get back young women who have had a taste of real independence. . ” . SCHOOL BOARDS that still have en. teachers” won't have a chance at the young women who married while in service—but plan to go on work. ing for a few years while their husbands get established in a business or a profession. School systems that pay pitie fully low salaries aren't going to be able to lure back into their old teaching jobs the young wom en who have found .out that their brains and ability other than teachin
in cities “no married wamse
» - - ad THE SCHOOLS of -the ¢ountry desperately need good teachers, and the young women who had enough patriotism and daring to get into uniform when their country said it needed them or were up and coming enough to trade a teaching job for one on an assembly line would bring a fresh new enthusiasm into classrooms. Furthermore, their experiences would command the respect of students, But the. classrooms aren't goe ing to get these women back une
better in the way of salany. chance at advancement and pers sonal freedom than most school systems have offered Seashery =n the past.
te ——_———————
DURING the war, schools lost
until 11:15 discussing it with Gen. Marshall, when Marshall's message was sent to Short, That message read: “The Japanese are, presenting today at 1pm what amounts - t6 an’ ultimatum. [Japanese future action unpredictable but- hostile action possible at any moment.”
‘That ‘precipitated the war, Brewster charges: Secretary Hull's - ultimatum to| Ambassador Nomura. and Special Envoy Kurusi No. 26 pulled the! trigger on Jap war plans, Gearhart charges: “If Japan had signed that agree-
TITO FEAR SEEN
CHARGES wy ar members Kimmel and Short were not properly warned, Testimony by Gen. Marshall: “They knew why Hawaii was set up militarily as it was. We did not
| Gearhart charges:
‘munition ashore at time of attack:
According to Wilkinson neither he ment it would have had to himilinor Stark placed any Pearl Har- |Tee itself by drawing away from bor significance on this: message, | Indo-China, withdrawing from ChiBoth ‘the army and navy were con..|N® proper and Manchuria, breaking vinced the attack would be against ita alliance with Hitler and MusThailand (Siam). : . » ~ TESTIMONY by Gen. Sherman A It was the Japs who issued the pve 5, Shier. ol army intelligerice in | ultimatum and they so referred to It was evident-the Japs were an it” fn their reply. Peace appeared] the march. Thé intérpretation nlost doomed early in November. at the time was that they| The Japs had set out .to- force us would attack Thaila: “ito abandon “principles for which we stood In the Pacific and all over I Kimmel and Short had been [the world. ,
SECRETARY RULES testimony:
have to tell them that.
“We had given Short a directive Nov. 27 as to the probability of war, He was the responsible commander. © “We had every reason to believe the command ‘was ready. There were letters from Short me the impression that he already had an extreme sensitivity to the dangers of air Wank: » ee
ADM. RICHMOND KELLY TURNER, 104] war plans chief: “Specific orders were sent Kimmel on Nov. 27 to executé an appro-
‘gave
Jtrom Sovietizing
Seeks to Avoid ‘Moderating Influence of U. S. .
. By LEIGH WHITE Times Foreign Service
"~The systematic propaganda of hate now being directéd against “Anglo-Americans” In Yugoslavia, is apparently based on Marshal Tito'’s fear of our moderating influence will prevent him
the country in the guise of implant-
priate defense deployment prepara-
advised that . Tokyo had ordered | On Dee. 8 our government re{mapping of Pearl Harbor, and had! ceived reporis of movement of a Jap béen told of, Jap destructién - of fleet toward the Kra peninsula. This!
teodes, of the 14-point message and | was confirmation that the long - “If Kimmel had followed orders made by the . dbf Secretary of - State Hull's “ult {threatened Jap ‘movement of ex« the ships Would have been at sea. American emtold the committee Dec. 12 that ‘the
fmatum,” they would have had suf- | | pansion to the south was under
Ticlent time to smash the attack.: way. J
tory to éarrying out tasks assigned | in Hawaii defense war plans. . .
No further explicit orders ~were deeniéd necessary.” -
‘THE DOCTOR SAYS: Jaundice” Indicates Bile Duct Blocked
Gallstones Blamed on Overeating =
By WILLIAM A.- O'BRIEN, M. D.. VEGETABLES such as siiferONE OF every five Womien over kraut, cabbage, onions. gucumbers,
Majority |some, Highly seasoned or of stones do: not themselves cause foods are not: advisable. | symptoms;
» ~ in
is not den# except tq relieve at-|
tacks of colic or pain distress. .
tion in an infected gallblad=|
Opera d¥F or stones removes the gallblad-
ing. “popular democracy.” ; A press study.
| bassy here reveals that over a six- Rg month period, 10 Po per ent of all {space in the con- Mr. White trolled Yugoslav press was devoted
Fore
|'was 100 per cent favorable.
BELGRADE, Yugoslavia, Dec. 31 -
make a teacher's life miserable.
rule on. the books - 2)
’
y off in jobs
less they offer them something
Duritrig the same. period of time, however,-the study shows that only
2 per cent of Yugoslavia's officially contrilled newspaper space was des
possivlity ~of attacks and compli- ¢ian will preigribe ‘a vitamin sup~ suits frem camplications in" the- bile’ tion Was unfavorable.
chtions. plement as-indicated.
As the bile. passes. from the % liver on its way
{ia
I the region of the stomach after
eating, hétrtburn and ‘gas are usu- . Lally suggestive of an infected gally ey the allo bladder or stones. Purther exami. mixtures w hig pai are. indicated, ‘but operation
«later “is co trated, Stones are. - more apt to form pin “thick bile, especially. “if the gallbladder is infected. Gallstones blier |
’ HANNAH <
Dr. O'Brien consist of. a fatty material, coloring matter and calcium. Over« | eating, particularly of fats, tends {to caulle gallstone formation, med, cording to some Loa
CHARACTERISTIC gallstone at|tacks stéft with a colicky ‘pain be- | low the rib margin’ on the right | side, “extending through the back to |a point just below the. tip of the [right shoulder blade. “The attacks . start after a heavy meal, éepéclaily of pork, fried foods, or cabbage. Vomiting is constant with severe. attacks, ‘When Jaundice develops it {is most likely that the stone has
Senshtion of fullness, distress inj
| duet or Tiver.
solve ga the public, but they are. value, “Stones” passed under ish conditions: prove=to be soap pellets formed from the medicine.
CONWAY PROMOTED
BY BURLINGTON
The appointment of John B
Conway, ticket mgent for thé Burl-|
|Inglonis+ailroad, to the position of
|traveling passenger agent for the art, but we Hive got Indianapolis headquarters was an- | seums back home, 30 we might as nounced today by W. P. O'Rourke, | well fill them up.” ; Kerempuh Due? + "his been de- :
general agent for’the company. Mr. Conway fs a veteran --of 25
| Remedjes which purport to dis-|.
G.-X's Called Subliuman G. 1's are uniformly presented to
Istones have bfen #old to Yugoslav leader?” are - subhuman without. yynes bent on looting and maltreate
ing subject. peoples, “Yezh (the Hedgehog) recently published a cartoon of two Neans dérihals in Ameriafi uniforms in ‘the act of leoting a bomb, wrecked | German art muse um,
“What do we want all this junk asks one as he Teffs a picture
for?” of Holbein and another by Duerer to his shoulders. “It's because they've got a lof of art but no museums to keep-it. in,” i the jother “We haven't any alot of mue-
[voting itself to exposing American
years experience in the railroad Finhumanity” in Ching and British
‘Since 1941 Mr. Conway has been
head ticket seller at Minnéapolis.
‘GRAIN, FEED DEALERS TO MEET JAN. 21.22 soldiers are wrapping the shells on’
,|agencies, beginning his career. in| “inhumanity” in- Java. “[the freight office at Dubuque, Towa.
Amateur: Satire
A $artoon labeled “Made in U. 8 'A.” shows two ape men in Amencan
spiced der, as this prevents furthet at- Voted to items about Britain and’ If the re- tacks. Further difficulty after thejthe Uriited States combined. More : chief concern is the stricted diet fs - -deficient the physi- gullbladder has been removed. re- than, 90 per “cent of-such informs i
Sod oa
uniforms loading shells into Cases - +
addressed to Chiang Kai-shek. The
the Atlantic Charter.
ington knew late Dec. 6, 1041, that
-3
tried to pass down the bile duct and has become lodged. Attacks of colic occur at varying intervals; strict attention to diet may help in avoiding attacks, A diet low in fat #n@ high in sugars
to and starches is recommended, Fat Ha patients should reduce through a
special diet. Animal fats, especialwhich are rendered (bacon
The * 451 annual convention of
ers association will be held Jan.|were not for the fact that it is part 21-22 at the ‘Columbia club. of an official campaign of anti-Brite Fred K. Sale, secretary, announced. |ish, anti-American propaganda ap-
that a banquet for grain, feed and pearing in all Yugoslav newspapers 3
other allied interests of the Indian- and magazines. No other apolis market will be given on the | [tion about America and Britain first day of the convention. Among permitted to be published in official press, and none but the ¢
It-would hardly be worthwhile to ‘|the Indiana Grain and Feed Deal- mention this type of sifire if i%
5
