Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 2 March 1946 — Page 2

developments: al C. I. O. waited meeting

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In the General Motors developrepresentatives of 175,000 workers disclosed yesterday

April 1 to enforce bargaining dei vote was announced employer representa-

te eonterence| $8

A Crows.

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_ ahd vo AT Ome of the “improvemetits’ te

2t was built as a shipping center, but

AROUND THE U.S. — . 1200 Hunters Open Fire on 50,000 Crows

NEW CASTLE, Pa. March 2 (U.| ~ P)~—Twelve hundred hunters, armed with shotguns, swept down} on 30.000 crows in a three-hour grand frontal assault last night, The hunters startéd into the rookery, along thé Ohio-Pennsyl-vania state line at-9 p. m. Mayhem broke loose. Shotgun. blasts, crow calls and shoutd3 of the hunters pierced. the afr until midnight. The hunt was & success. A good | time was had by all—except the The “bag” was not determined because many of the birds could not be retrieved in the dark. Estimates ranged from “hundreds” to “s thousand ‘or more.” Since beginning of the war, the crow population has increased -in this district to such an extent that {t was estimated some 50,000 inhabited the “Hilisyille-Edenburg Rookery.” The big, raucous marauders were blamed for last year's poor small game season.

Child, Lured by Ice,

Trapped in Cooler

RICHMOND, Cal, March 2 (U. P.) .—Six-year-old Thomas Leon Davis’ yearning for a plece of ice nearly caused his death. He was trapped . inside a re frigerator ice cream truck when he

driver was absent, His sister, Jane, 8, had the same yearning 45 minutes later and opened the refrigerator doors to} find Thomas unconscious from l cold. i Thomas was taken to Richmond| hospital where plasmd and oxygen,

tives met in an attempt to avert the which .would involve more © In other threatened walkouts, sepresentatives of two operating railroad brotherhoods and the in- | dependent long lines telephone union went ahead with strike plans. The unions, representing a combined

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board in nounced

provided in collective bargaining. - Elsewhere in Washington, senate

ready" with a 55-60 cents-an-hour minimum wage bill which they be-

Keith's Giving - _ 'Circus' Program

The aber yesterday complete with lions.

~ up the he drew plenty of applause with hi company of five trained dogs. three Oorwins, all “of and su

the gtiht-rope are Pat an

—————— a hh si fs NON-SLIP GLOVES

: gloves, made of synthetic rubbe | have roughened fingers to assure

other slippery ohjects.

to pull’ on and off.

INDIANAPOLIS BANK CLEARINGS . ~For Today

MAS oe he ad

more than 400,000, walkouts| Kermit Hoesman of Woodville

an hour for 30,000 workers in 40 plants of the Aluminum Company you in 1948.” of America. The decision, permit-|

Republican leaders said they were

father-son acrobatic | he jerked the bell cord loose.

~ Top spot on the show, however, goes to the _ team of 7-year-old Kenny Carlton “and his youthful dad.

we ELECTRONIC TUBES

dly weaker sex, neat bit of aerial work! SHOW B AD BEANS siver It brou k| ; , ght $116,760 from the more difficult by having their Sabin Metal Corp. of New York the

: WABHINGTON.~~New household

grip on soapy dishes and | “look” at each bean Bome gloves inner finish, and big lining, to make them

000 pea’ crops. .

were administered. Physicians said he would recover.

'Leap-Year Trick On Draft Fails FREMONT, O., March 2 (U. P).| | —Two Sandusky county boys pulled

| the calendar but they didn't get away with it.

and Elmer Hetrick of Lindsey asked

the wage stabilization |the board if they were to register Washington 18st night an-[on their 18th birthdays. ~The offi-

wage Increases of 19 cents|clals sald that was right. “Okay,” sald the boys, “we'll see .,

0 Both were -born Feb. 29. i

| Sandwich Leads to

Streetcar Brawl! CHICAGO, March 2

who | {owned the sandwich, tried to snatch

| wiches on passengers. | In the ensuing struggle with Cox|P

3 iand Motorman Mathias Speigler, | netted the federal government so) Jefrcus came to Keith's the- Proper punched Cox in the jaw, far $272.538.12. A large ‘proportion of the parts,| eight windows with his-fists, Then|all precision tooled-and costly to { make, have gone In two categories, He fled the streetcar and Wwas|scrap aluminum and mixed metals|

'Speigler in the eye, and smashed

sought a piece of ice while the|’§

‘Improvement Doomed as Army Closes |

‘the

a dn i bo a Ll SRR

parts, the huge hog barn is almost clear of army depot material. When the crates of parts in the background have been shipped to buyers of scrap metals, the state fair i for the 1948 hog show.

Ld " »

state fairground made by the army doors were made too low for big" trucks. Anyway, the state doesn’t want it, so part of Indiana's bill to the U. 8. will be the cost of jurking it. © ‘ : y : vd \ 3

Depot

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

' Vy TIT

this maintenance building.

Among the last of the technical service command's depot supplies to go at the fairground were these slightly bedraggled brooms, mops and buckets. Mostly sold now, clearance of this type of léftovers will free another building to the state.

It won't be long now. Once piled high with crates of plane engine

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ON

Bodies Discovered” in Pit ‘Near Bloomington. - (Continued From Page One)

peared stunned and confused, He is not being held." : Sheriff 8kirvin quoted him as saying he had driven Mrs, Ooleman to work -at the Johnsbn Creamery at 11.a m. yesterday. Mrs. -Coleman left the creamery to go. to lunch shortly after that. Then, - according to the sheriff, Mr. Coleman came to call for his wife at 5 p. m, She Wasn't there. He drove on home to the farm. Not nding her, he returned to town, began looking through restaurants where’ he thought she might be eating. Searching for Koonis Then he came to the sheriff's office and found the sheriff was out searching. for Mr. Koontz.” © Empire Stone Co. employees said Mr, Koontz had left his office about noon to inspect machinery on the Hunter Co. property near the old mill. Empire was considering buying the machinery. When he failed to return for dinner, his wife called the sheriff. . Mr. Koontz’ automobile, a Chrysler Royal, was found parked about 100 yards from the old mill. The car was locked. : Inside the death mill, evidence of a terrific struggle were found. There on the floor by the blood stains lay Mr. Koontz’ wallet. Untouched was $107 in it. Ropes Found State police theorized that probably more than one. person committed the murder. Mr, Koontz weighed 180 pounds, was powerfully built. On the floor, too, searchers found the ropes which had been used to bind the victims and which had been cut before the bodies were thrown into the pit. ¢ State police also questioned Mr. Koontz' two brothers, Rufus and Orville. They said they were working all afternoon. Kenneth Coleman told police and the prosecutor he had been busy all afternoon putting up hay in his barn, seven miles south of Bloomington. This was the second double murder in Indiana in four months. The bodies of George Tyson, 38, and Ethel Sparks, 18, of E. St. Louis, Ill, were found buried in a shallow grave in a wheatfield at Rockport, 40 miles south of here, several weeks ago, Their slayer has never-been found.

sexample:

board can start getting it ready

DOG REACTS TO

w we eure wari State Fairground Is Soon To Assume Original Role

By ROBERT BLOEM

perations here neared completion.

The depot, a supply hub of the world’s greatest fighting air force, is |

Only a few scattered crates remained in the air forces parts depot at state fairground today as one of the most spectacular reconversion

CALLS OF BUGLE

By Science Service | WASHINGTON — Whether, like the soldier in the song, he wanted to murder the bugler and spend the rest of his life in bed, is not told, but a dog in the Institute of Experimental Medicine in Leningrad was conditioned to have his heart beat faster and his blood pressure rise when he heard the sound of 2 | trumpet call, states a report received here: from the Soviet scientists committeé in Moscow.

ting the company to apply for price] Later they agreed to sign up and y.ying on the gaunt look of a department store after a fire sale.tellef, approved wage adjustments await pre-induction notices. | By March 14 the scrapping of $20,000,000 worth of plane engine parts, critical a few months ago but use-| : less in peace, will be finished. The state will move in and by the be “undone” -before the fairground UP end of the summer hundreds of becomes practical for its original (U. P)~!fancy cattle, hogs, horses and sheep : ir. Heve will compromise administra-|charies Proper, 28, found a lunch| wij] ‘be on Fh in place DL PUIDGSE 2 slate Jair tion demands for a still higherihox under his streetcar seat and aircraft parts. wage and southern insistence that!began nibbling on a sandwich,

the pfesent 40-cent rate be retained.| Conductor Charles Cox, Scrap Nets $272,538

More than 80 per cert of the

lit away. Proper threw the box the Of clearing the fairground for re-

length of the car, spilling sand-,turn to the state already has been accomplished. The sale of serap,

ulkiest -operation

| made in ‘the property which must

of the| This settlement is expected to run {above what will be realized from scrap and salvage sales. The state job will accept part of its compensation .in usable materials on which it has first priority, but the value of such! items probably will be a “drop in the bucket,” compared to the total Uncle Sam will owe Indiana on the | deal. It's part of the “cost of victory.”

involved, has

{strating theory of Paviov, Prof. Konstantin Bykov, a pupil of Pavlov’s, has been awarded the Stalin prize.

having adrenalin injected into a vein at the same time -that a trumpet was blown. Adrenalin, also called epinephrine, is a product of

(found by police hiding under an scrap. About 518 tons of aluminum |

But Johnny Laddie is not barking automobile a block away. His feet! scrap brought $51,000, while 2000) wrong amusement tree’ for.Were sticking out.

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4| CAMDEN; N. J. (U. P).<A set of |

Dick Clemmens han- | electron tube threatens to provide]

|

|exact number of beans in a gold- | fish bowl. Described as a “speedy, foolproof,

T.l automatic operation,” the - tubes

a

and then separate the good ones] from the bad. Approximately 1000 of these “‘su-| per sorters,” which employ RCA

| control tubes, are now sorting about | 1,600,000 pounds of food each day | in plants from California to Vir- | ginia and in Canada, The foods inelude seed corn, peanuts, coffee and even potatoes. |

HOLDS PEA GROWERS - NEED PROTECTION

- SPOKANE, Wash, (U, PJ) —8uperfor Judge Louis Bunge recently granted a permanent injunction to the Inland Empire Pea Growers’ Association to prevent che county from collecting ad valorem taxes on

Judge Bunge based his decision on federal laws which he described as “doing everything for the protection. of pea grower co-opera-tives except prescribe a recipe for | Split pes soup.”

.| MORE COAL MINED WASHINGTON, March 2 (U. P)'

{tons of mixed metals have grossed $45,000. :

Largest single sale recorded was|

that of 100,000 pounds of scrap con |

taining considerable quantities of

With 20 to 60 bids being sub-| mitted for each lot offered, leading) buyers have been J.-Solotkin and

Leon Cohn, Falender Iron & Metal Corp., all of Indianapolis, and the

Kokomo.

The parts will go mainly

as bulk metal. Not Adapted to Civilian Use They’re-of no use, the depot pub-

military aircraft ehgines are built

conditions. Civilian airlines , use engines built for economy of opes-

ation, and power and speed factors 4

are less important than economy and safety. In addition to metal scrap, other items are under the hammer. Scrap lumber is going at $2.50 a ton, and there isn't enough of it to warrant the expensive procedure of bidding. Kindling and boxes may be purchased at $1 a ton.

+-“More than: $400,000 worth of

“improvements” to the grounds will be virtually lost because the fair board doesn’t need them, in fact doesn’t even want them. A garage, a maintenance building, WPA shacks and similar structures necessary for the operation of the depot during the war just “clutter up the place” from the fair board's point of view, Finally, by the time the state moves in a figure will be set for payment by the army for changes

SEE PRICE CONTROL -

NEEDED FOR YEAR

(Continued From Page One)

machinery of price control. It pro- | posed some system of lifting con-

largest possible production before | June, 1947 | Control Act Changes { It tentatively recommended the|

ay Satie Midge ole sutt competition for contest flends| oc, Alex Cohén's-Sons, Brodey and following changes in the present & e © who specialize in computing the Brodey, J. Kasle & Sons, Inc, Price control act:

ONE: Establish. the yeprs 1936-41 as the base period in establishing]

(Luntz Iron & Steel Co. of Kokomo earnings standards on which price |

(ceilings are based, except in situa-|

to tions where the results would be in- ty individually | smelters for treatment and re-use equitable. The present base period | prospect for gold. Nelson Farris

includes the years 1936-39,

TWO: In the case of essential low-priced products, allow industry-

[lle relations office explains, because | Wide current cost, plus “at least a boogie-woogie phonograph records

| reasonable profit,” to manufacturers

NEBRASKA TOWNS

phototubes, cathode-ray tubes, and | for power and speed under combat|OP & list designated jointly by OPA

land civilian production administration. Distributors would be .permitted to pass on in full any dollar sincrease resulting from these ‘con[cessions, and percentage Increases | where the nrofit margins are al- | ready tight. THREE: Modify the standards of products, other than those on the low-priced list, to allow recovery of total costs, ' : tat ————————

CLAIMS SETTLED WASHINGTON, March 2 (U. P) —Attorney General Tom C. Clark

of the governmenf, against the Anaconda Wire & Cable Co. have heen settled for $1,626,000. 1f was alleged that the company -did not properly inspect and test wire and oable being produced for the army and navy in 1041-43 at plants in Marjon, Ind, Pawtucket, R. I, and Hastings, N. Y. :

nots coal production for the week ended. Feb, 23 topped the! 440,000 net, and ran 675,000 ahead of ‘the corresponding 1 , the National Coal

by approximatgly qd

at Savings

socis-|| INTERNATIONAL BEAUTY * orn

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~ BEAUTY SERVICE »

ry

blood pressure increased.

|young shipyard worker and ‘his | “bride” were outfitting=their 36-foot ketch, “Footloose,” today for a detrols on certain items to permit the layed honeymoon cruise up the

announced today that civil claims.

For this and other studies demonthé conditioned reflex

The dog was conditioned by

the adrenal glands which stimulates heart activity and raises blood pressure. After several simultaneous trumpet blowings and adrenalin injections, the trumpet was blown when adrenalin had not been injected. The dog's heart nevertheless began to beat faster and his

COAST COUPLE PLAN CRUISE UP AMAZON

SAN PEDRO, Cal (U. P)—A

Amazon river and said they hoped to start the trip next month. The couple, John, 28, and Dorothy McBride, 24, have been living on their ship since their marriage four years ago and, waited only for the end of the war to start preparations for their honeymoon. They will carry diving, fishing, hunting and photographic equipment and hope to find a geologist accompany them and help them Mrs. McBride's brother, will along as navigator. Mrs. McBride has a stock of

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“to propitiate hostile natives.”

WisHiGTon

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A Weekly 'Sizeup by the Washington ! Staff of the Scripps-Howard Newspapers. ; Fulded missile capable of ‘traveling 3000 fo 5000 miles accurately-

to target. !

Gen. Eaker hopes 'that whatever enemy attacks us will attack before he (enemy) is quite ready, as Hitler did, and therefore will not

totally obliterate us first day,’ Ged.

to start within hour, for attack on source of such rockets. if enemy -waits until"he is completely prepared he could ‘wipe out all large U. 8. cities and industrial centers. in few hours. \ NOTE: Gen. Eaker told committee today we do not hiive a

-

Eaker wants planes always ready,

wt

SATURDAY, MARCH 2, 1048

[LOCAL WOMAN | BADLY BURNED

Hurt When Stove Explodes: In. Filling Station.

(Continued From Page ‘One)

e admits

single squadron of once mighty air force capable of carrying out major military mission. : . » &

Strike: Outlook MARCH should show: whether reconversion labor troubles are over hump. On calendar: Final clean-up of steel strike, now. not much more than half settled because of price uncertainties of some 500 smaller com= panies caught in squeeze between higher prices for raw materials and higher labor costs. .Return of automobile industry to full production, with some indication how “company security” clauses in Ford’s new contract will work. \ Convention of United Automobile Workers, turbulent and important segment of C. I. O. Biennial drive of John L. Lewis for higher wages for mine workers, with danger of coal strike that would tie up automobile and other manufacturing as badly as steel strike did. But there's less chance of government standing firm on price policy in this industry, ed Senate action on proposed labor legislation, ranging from mild to drastic.

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Occupation Methods DESPITE charges that we have no occupation policy in Europe, our military government people think we're doing good job, compared to other countries. For

When Russians took over a German town they painted Jargest office buildings bright ‘red, flew Soviet flag from all windows, appointed a Communist burgomeister and police chief, turned ration tickets over to the local Communist leader, and required all Germans to come to Red building for them. Our method has been to let Germans pick their own officials, so long as they are non-Nazis. Tangible result was seen in recent Austrian election, where Communist party made poor showing. And Communist showing was poorest’ In Russian zone where only one party member was elected to ‘national legislature. In American zone, threé party members were elected. We've been screening German prisoners of war in this country, segregating -non-Nazis and teaching them rudiments of democratic process. Several of these trained prisoners shipped back to Germany already have been elected to municipal offices. » # ®

More VA Changes

NEXT shakeup in Veterans Administration may affect its legal department. Solicitor Edward E. Odom is a Hines holdover, and has Legion support. . But friends of Gen. Bradley say policies he has approved have way of “getting lost” “in legal department— and later he's blamed for failure to act. Gen. Bradley's in for more trouble in his fight with congress for right to place veterans’ hospitals where they'll be most useful. House appropriations commitmittee has instructed = Budget

U. S. PROTESTS T0 RUSSIA ARE SHARP

(Continued From Page One)

for the attacks on the American nes. ‘Neither our people nor thé Russians want to go to war, but wars develop out. of such AgBra~ vating incidents unless they are stopped in their incipiency,” Senator Willis sald. ’ The rebuffs of the Soviet closely followed a speech of Secretary of State James F. Byrnes which foreshadowed a firmer, more “realistic U.S. policy in relations with the Soviet government." Denies Secret Agreement Referring to the recent statement of a Russian officer in Manchuria

thay a big power agreement had

LINCOLN, Neb. (U: P.).—Nebraska |5&id:

GET AR-MARKING.

hopes to become one of the best | “air-marked” states in the union [through a new program sponsored by the aeronautics department. Under the plan, the department will furnish materials for the work, and municipalities, the- site and necessary labor. Mayors have been asked to co-operate by naming sponsoring organizations to select suitable sites, : All towns marked according to civil aeronautics agency specifica~ tions will be designated on a national aviation map, as well as on one now being prepared by the

..|booty in Manchuria.”

granted the Soviet the right to ake Japanese machinery {from Manchuria, the state department

“Pie United States has no agree ment, secret or otherwise, with the Soviet government in regard to war

The state department said that it had / informed Russia that “disposal of Japanese ‘Assets, such as the industries of Manchuria, was a matter of common interest and concern to those ‘ allles who bore the major burden in defeating Japan and it would be most inappropriate at this time to make any final disposition of Japanese ex-

by removal from Manchuria of such

industrial equipment as ‘war booty’

~ in priorities and nearly half

ternal assets in Manchuria, either

Director Smith not to turn money for VA hospitals un committee has been advised. I promises to say yes or no to VA plans within 48 hours. Plan, apparently, is to have congress pass resolution withholding. funds f&8r any project to which it objects. This could set precedents tfking from administrative agencies all freedom to spend. money appropriated to them; make all expenditures political. * - " # »

Republican Hopes OPTIMISTIC G. O. P. leaders. assert they'll win control of house this fall by picking up four seats in Connecticut, two in Rhode Island, two to four in New York, one in Delaware, one in Maryland, two or three in West Virginia, two or three in Ohio, one or two in Michigan, two or three in Illinois, two in Minnesota, two or three in Missouri, one or two in Washington, two to six in California, one in New Mexico, one in Utah, four to six in Pennsylvania. Listed in “possible” class are one seat each in Indiana, Montana and Oklahoma, t= Republicans need only 27 mon seats to win control—if they keep all they have.

= ¥ . 6.0. P. Chairmanship LOOK for Brownell. retirement to be followed hy resignation “of James S: Kemper as chairman of Republican finance committee. As for chairmanship—former Senator John Danaher, now $20,000 employee of the national committee, has been leading candidate. But friends now think he'll decline, run for senate again in Connecticut. re

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. » . HOMEBUILDERS ~~ may

get higher priorities on veterans’ dwellings costing under $7500

than on those costing more. Expediter Wyatt is considering such move when materials begin to flow. At present there’s no difference

going for homes in the $7500$10,000 range. : Inter-departmental committee is being created by Mr, Wyatt to pass on all government construction—post offices, flood control, highways, etc. He thinks most federal works will fall into deferrable class.

» ” 1 4 Federal Aid Bill CHANCES of federal aid to education bill are brighter than ever before if public school interests and the states are willing to compromise. Senator Taft (R. 0.) spokesman for economy, indicates he'll’ favor an aid bill’ ‘if’ funds go only to states where need is shown. States benefitting most under

in Rocky Mountain area.

” td » BRIGADIER GENERALS Being reduced to colonels will rank only from 1041 and 1942 according to latest war department . ruling. Army wanted to rank them from 1035, so they'd outrank all other colonels, but found it lacked authority under the law.

or by agreement between the Soviet and Chinese governments.” The navy department said the first airplane incident occurred last Oct. 16 when a Russian fighter plane fired at least once on a navy Mariner seaplane 25 miles at sea Then, 10 days ago, two Soviet planes overtook another Mariner plane and- fired warning bursts at it for 10 minutes, the navy said. the crew was injured, the navy said. :

{going over the top so far, They

jthe 3d service command thus de-

plan would be those in South and |

Neither plane was hit and nore of |

In reply to the first protest, the

17-year-old garage employee, told firemen that he drove an automos’ bile to the gas pump to fill the tarik.” He said that he replaced the pump hose and. started tq drive away, but that the hose was appar-.

ently caught on the bumper,

The pump, was pulled over-causing a short-circuit in electric wires lead= ing to a light mounted .on its tap. Gasoline flowing from the toppled pump exploded. . . Two Firemen Injured The fire department led by Assist= t Fire Chief Otto J. Petty put out the fire in less thar a half hour, Battalion Chief Charles D. Gregory ala sev oy nozzles were ems ployed" attling the flamin - line. * Ee Several \employees and’ a few . patrons were in the garage ‘when the fire broke out, but all escaped injury, - : One fireman, Capt. Carl Malcom, in charge of ladder truck 18, ree ceived slight injuries and was taken to City hospital for\treatment. Ane other fireman, J Scahill of Station 13, was cut his hands but remained on the 0b.

FEARS ARMY. WILL BE SHORT

Gen. Eddy Says Volunteers \ Expected to Drop.

By Scripps-Howard Newspapers BALTIMORE, March 2 — Some army officers aren't greatly encour aged because enlistment quotas are

think some of the current crop of volunteers might be motivated by something less than a desire to serve. ] Pid . And once the pressure is off, they - fear America's interim army ‘will be found far short of its 1,500,000 man objective. hl Maj. Gen. Manton 8. Eddy of

scribes the . situation: “The selective service law, une less continued by congress, is scheduled to end May 15, and we are 8 bit dubious about the effect this will have on recruiting volunteers. To date, many of the half-million recruits we have obtained are men who were about to be, or who had already been, inducted under the selective service act.”

‘Public Apathy’

- Gen. Eddy, who commandéd the 9th infantry division through North

and the 12th army dorps many, declared: J “As military men Wwe are ¢oncerned about the general public | apathy regarding the future duties and responsibilities of our army, This is apathy amounting almost to indifference, an indifference which can only be interpreted as lack of interest in the mission that the people themselves have given to the army to insure a peace that has been won at such a great cost. “The only’ interest apparent to us is that a vast portion of our citizens want to know when, where and how their son, brother, father or husband can get out of service and back home. “While it is apparent that the majority of our people approve occupation- of Germany and Japan, this approval seems to be on the basis of ‘it will be all right so long as it does not affect my son, BiL"” Having Difficulty Gen. Eddy said the war deartment currently is attempting to demobilize its wartime army, create an interim army and, finally, determine the structure of its peacetime military stablishiment. “We are having difficulty in these last two fields,” he said. “We want this regular army to be a volunteer army. We are doing everything possible to make it a volunteer army. The future of our country and the world depends on how well this assignment is carried out. We need volunteers to do the job, and do it right.” Gen. Eddy, who has been in the {army since 1916, sald “from my own experience as a division and

In“Ger- |

may not appl miles * either Arthur,

TRAIN KILLS MINER

miner.

troop train.

navy said, the Russians pointed out that the defense.of Port Arthur was task of occupational forces. a Soviet responsibility, under the treaty terms andathat U. 8, planes mendous responsibility upon our closer than 12 military Dairen or Port of fighting a war

know how. big and difficult is the

“The situation places a tre« leadership. The urgency is gone. -But the {safety of our nation in the future, and our co-operation in building &

secure world peace, must be further PRINCETON, March 2 (U. P).— assured.” . : CHbson County Coroner W. ¥. Mor- | ris today inyestigated the death of! Howard Bishop, 62, a. Princeton coal’ He was killed last night|of the mild red-green type has been when struck by & Southern ratiroad | apparently cured by & 6ourse of

a ——————— VITAMIN A AIDS EYES ; WASHINGTON/.~Color blindness

| treatment that includes vitamin A.

1910

Chas. Apostol

Indianapolis— We Thank Y ou

you and your friends with quality food. Wr Od

Luncheon . . . . 11 to 2

Dinner . . . . .5fte 8

N ationally Famous

Leading the Industry with the finest’ preparation : of Food and Service to the Public

We pledge otirselves to continue to serve

/- 144 E. OHIO ST.

1946

for Steaks

the finest

P.M. P. M.

Africa, Sicily, Ifaly and Normandy

corps commander in - this war, 1}

k

_ SATUR

Hi

2

Moscow Iran (

WASHIN James F. Bj promise. to w Moscow's tinue to be | , announcing .. He sald, s was no right be held in t ' ereign states sent of the 1 If Moscow of Iranian will be und protest and n Critics

The altern ‘him off the ment by the continued oc The admi alarmed by t critics are « hand in dea A senator today that : “night speech ably after a

- . the senate |

«Vandenberg denkerg was uary-Februar sembly meeti Reporting | denberg conc cow to speak an equally American pc the “Russians President ’ to have felt speech woul licans to put a disadvantag for advocatin toward Mosc

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\ \ The state

big bundle speech for - Mr.\ Byrnes’ Acting. CI George (D. C eign elatio the United N must take st in refusing to Senator Jo said the terr agreement 8 that the. que before the 1 The security 21 in New Y Senator H N. H.) said ° not take Sec seriously whe action. 1 sl Mr: Byrnes’ 1 action is con Iran was 0 lease pipe lin Big Three “there. All have been announced t! remaining wc of this week

Britain Cc Protest to

LONDON, eign Secreta vacation toda protest to Ri of Soviet tro London alrea with Washin The foreig consultation and America Russian stan a joint prote: quest for cla stand.

Senator Hc today he wo of price ad civilian proc be combined. Mr. Capeh troduce a bil effect, shortl Washington Mr. Capehs upon. his re Angeles, whe

ings by the committee.