Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 14 March 1946 — Page 7
H 14, 1946.
—
ived rom arge tion DW?
ER
so pretty ck come ight blue The side eeves are ouches of en’s half24%.
$8.30
vith white r spring. hite braid lum and o 18
$8.30
ece dress he white cent. Jn
$8.30
e print is black in k- jet but38 to M4.
$8.30
1 the nters
Phone lers
ESA EER EERO EERE EERE EERE ERROR ETE LEER EINER ROO EEE R EEE ERR RE EERO ERE EIRENE ROR LOREEN REAR TR CERNE OORT OR REE O RONNIE EE SOeT ORO REO aaa AAaNaaa EEE SRNR EERE eas R LOIRE ELSE TRIN
a Filey
Advertisement
yD Edwards Helps [ro Folks!
For years Dr. Edwards relieved
patients bothered by constipati with his Pound Dr, Fdwards Give Tablets—now sold by all dru
Olive Tablets are mild, gentle $14 ~~80 thorough! Olive Tablets act on
duce mote natural-like i
No griping. Just complete satisfaction. Caution: use as A vompisss sali 30¢, 60¢
THURSDAY. MARCH 11, 1048
ANTI-SEMITISM NOT EAD IN GERMANY
Indicate Discrimination * May Creep Back on Jews; worthy patron; Marvel Robinson, Most of Race. Hate Germans Bitterly.
BOTH upper and lower bowels to pro-
WE a A
eens ee p————— mot
Germany.
ment probably contains more Jews| —German and non- -German—than | zone, the other three zones put. together. from which for the most part the It was indicated that discrimina- | Germans. _have been evicted. tion against Jews might be ex-| pected to creep back depending loaded with more complications
2
By EDWARD P, MORGAN Times Foreign Correspondent
BERLIN, March 14.—Anti-semitism 1s dormant but not dead in
That is the gist, it was learned today, of a recent survey, made by one of the intelligence branches of the United States military govern-
ment, on the Jewish problem. It was centered on the American-occupied “zone, which at the mo-
|
This last situation,
They live in private homes
perhaps, is
THE. INDIANA
MILLERSVILLE 0. E. S.
T0 INSTALL OFFICERS]
Millersville chapter 300, O.E.S., will install officers at 8 p. m. Monday. They are Mrs. Iva Dalton, | worthy matron; Arthur M. Roberts,
&
associate matron; Roscoe Brown, associate patron; Ethel Roberts, secretary; Amelia Riggs, treasurer, Blanche Spilman, conductress; Alice Hollenback, associate conductress; Nora Heinrichs, chaplain; June Nehrling, marshal; Edith Glass, organist; Katherine Roberts, Adah; Mildred Butcher, Ruth; Mary Hess, Esther; Dorothy Thompson, Martha; Beatrice McLean, Electa; Agnes Walls, warder, and Shirley Shupperd, sentinel, Blanche O’Brien will be installing matron; Marie Harm, installing marshal, and Opal
bre
POLIS TIMES Firm ls
By ROBERT RICHARDS United Press Staff Correspondent NEW YORK, March 14-—This atomie and jet plane age is no headache to Leo Weiser, He's too busy ‘concentrating on teaching people to drive ordinary cars. Despite the fact that new autos just ain't, and most folks figure they'll be doing all their hustling by air within 10 years, Mr. Weiser's Lexington avenue firm has more business than he can handle. He's already taught 20,000 people to drive. “Some people figure that I should feel like the blacksmiths must have felt about 20 years ago,” Mr. Weiser said, “but I don’t feel that way at all, Some folks think, with all these new inventions, that there just isn’t much : future in this fourwheel stuff. But me, I think people
May, installing chaplain.
will always be driving cars.”
Before the war Mr. Weiser had 13 cars working 13 hours a day, seven days a week. Now he has three 1946 models on the job. His drivérs — all married men — teach people to drive in eight half-hour lessons for $15. “The applications keep us swamped,” he sald, “It seems like everyone wants to learn to drive now, particularly veterans.” Mr. Weiser and his wife, Georgette, have just written a hook called “I Learned at Lexington” and they give it away for free. He taught Georgette to drive before they got married, but he doesn’t recommend it for other men. “That's the best thing we do,” he explained, “We keep homes from being wrecked because of driving’ quarrels.” No matter how badly the learn-
teachers never curl their lips 10] scorn or allow a sneer to lift the end of their nose. “But a husband,” Mr, Weiser explained sadly, “what does he do when his baby steps on the starter instead of the gas? Why, he sneers, of course.” That's where the trouble starts, and that’s where cupid gets the old heave-ho, Mr. Weiser's cars are equipped with dual clutches and dual brakes. His teachers can stop the car any time they see fit. “If they don’t like the way a woman {is driving, they just slap on the brake and let her start over,” Mr, Weiser sald, “If her husband did that, even if he didn’t sneer, she probably would rap him over the head with the steering wheel.” Somehow it's different when the
fairly expendable, But paid, end every woman money's worth,
WOMEN OF MOOSE "HOLDING INITIATION
ernor of ‘Indianapolis lodge 17, Loyal Ordér of Moose, will speak at initiation ceremonies of the Women of the Moose at 8 p. m. today {n the lodge ‘hall. Mr,
Schuesler is a pilgrim, the lodge's highest degree. Officers of the organization ares Mrs, Anua Simmons, senior regent; Mrs, Catherine Galoway, junior: regent; Mrs, Laura PFryberger, chaplain; Miss Anita Ebaugh, graduate ny Mrs. Ni Beckley, recorder; Mrs. Mae Aufder helde, treasurer; Mrs. Pearl Waggoner, . Lucille © Koelliker st
Myers, ide, and Mrs.
ing driver performs, Mr, Weiser's
teacher does it,
Taylor, assistant gui
Herman “W. Schuesler, past gove
upon how rapidly the following] factors developed: ONE: Restoration to Jews of property seized by the Nazis. was explained that this could Ri help but cause resentment, how- | ever unjustifiable, on the part of| those who had not been affected by | property transfer. “Fear of Jewish competition” was also mentioned. TWO: Further reduction in the size and strength of U. 8. otcupa~ tion forces. Presumably, the fewer allied soldiers around, the more likely the anti-semitic German would be to voice his old prejudices. THREE: The fate of eastern © { European Jews, some 36,000 of > | whom are living in displaced per- | sons centers, mostly in Bavaria and | Greater Hesse. Twenty thousand i more of these people and a num- © |ber of German Jews, as well, are -
WE RE ee d scattered” through the American
~
uy 2a
& “0D ALNVNSYD) IVNLINW NIFHINION
J BA a SSIaqQY IWYN
NI GISIEAUNI WY |
oqo SPoy§ ow puss ‘suvipu] ‘sijodeuw
“dpi Wueg SIUBYIW EI8 FIE-LL VY
NO m————
‘uoyoBiqo oN ‘NV1d SSO¥D
J1IHM mau Buizowo ayy in NOISIAIG NOILVWY¥OiNI
MR BER NW SS a a
NOWDILO¥S Awwvi [J NOILALOU vain [J
0 ———————
OV
than the other two combined. Most of these Jews hate the Germans bitterly. To them almost any | German is the symbol of the concentration camp. They are not interested in their present surroundings which—they hope-—are transitory. They want to get out of Bu« rope and forget it, Germany most of all. They are not particularly eager to work right now, giving the highly understandable reason that “we are not interested in the reconstruction of Germany.” Above all they do not want to work with Germans. Bring Sizable Bankrolls Many of the “infiltrees,” now trickling out of Poland and elsewhere in central Europe, have managed after liquidating their holdings at home to bring sizable bankrolls with them. They are tempted to dabble in the black market,
|
|
is
Plan now to restore rough, worn-out streets with
CONCRETE RESURFACING
old base with the needed additional strength of a top layer of concrete. The result is a clean, attractive street that is a tonic to property values and to neighborhood pride. Concrete resurfacing is safe, strong and smooth-riding. It carries traffic . fordecades with lowest upkeep. Ask your public officials to plan now to salvage old streets by resurfacing with concrete.
v In normal times no community can afford to have worn, down-at-the-heel streets. But don’t re think your worn-out streets are a complete loss. You can salvage them—economically— with concrete resurfacing.
Old base plus concrete eqlals modern street
Concrete resurfacing combines the remaining strength of the
PORTLAND CEMENT ASSOCIATION
611 Merchants’ Bank Building, Indianapolis 4, Ind.
A national organization to improve and extend the uses of concrete : : : through scientific research and engineering fleld work
Throughout the
located throughout Indianapolis.
DOWNTOWN OFFICE
12 CITY-WIDE BRANCHE
706, East Sixty-Third Street 3001 North Illinois Street 1541 North Illinois Street 1533 Roosevelt Avenue “1125 South Meridian Street 2122 East Tenth Street
* BRANCH DEPOSITORS automatically have complete downtown banking service at our Main Office.
Fletcher Trust Company
Capital and Surplus $s, 500, 000
\ 5
| rations than average Germans, but J in practice it is possible that they
| Germans hoarded their own stocks and bartered their possessions for
| because—ironically enough—licenses
BANKING SERVICE
You can do your banking conveniently —, near your home, ottice, shop or place of . business — at any ot our offices which are
Northwest Corner Pennsylvania and Market Streets
5501 East Washington Street 2506 East Washington Street 500 East Washington Street 474 West Washington Street 2600 West Michigan Street 1233 Oliver Avenue,
Use the Office in Your Neighborhood
-
MEMBER rROERAL Reathve system . amen FEDERAL seromr INSURANCE corsadaTion
while the allied governments ponder
THAR TET TTA
.
AYRES Ww DOWNSTAIRS © STORE Sr The “BUY WAY” of Indianapolis ) — S———
what they can best provide for them
as a permanent home. | as
German Jews fascism” get ‘more
Technically, “victims of
eat no better, because they probably returned destitute while the
more. In D. P. camps, of course, Jews get substantially higher rations than the German population. In many instances the German officials were found ready to bend over backward to help German Jews get jobs in civil service. But they find it hard to get licenses for |
business, partly because no business;
| is reviving fast in Germany, partly
go first to people who operated businesses before the war (theoreti-
|
cally proving they were not Nazis) —and how many Jews were allowed | to keep their businesses under | Hitler? A Difficult Task Restitution of Jewish property. a| difficult task in any case, is being made more so by the fact that when the Nazis seized it, it was not turned over to the city or provincial government but rather to the Reich. There is no central government in Germany yet and, therefore, no agency to assume responsibility for making these losses good. The present Jewish population of Germany will not be accurately known until a census is taken, but
Jews before 1933, now has 600, for example, and 300 of these come from other communities. Copyright, 1948, by The Indianapolis Times and The Chicago Daily News, Ine. PACK JELLY IN CARDBOARD WASHINGTON. Containers made of cardboard, impregnated and lacquered and lined with cellophane, are used in Germany for marmalade and jellies, it is reported.
City
it has shrunk to a shadow. Frank-| furt-on-the-Main, which had 32,000
|
|
Springy Innersoles and Heels to Make You Walk Like a Dancer!
at rr’
roe 4
a a og A wl
No nag Fal ”
ag ili
Black cat suede
Boogie-woogie blue suede
By SANDLER of BOSTON
Suedes! Cottons! Leather Soles and Heels!
So. young, so gay . . . AND S * 50
PAIR
more than one pair . . . for street
what a lilt these casual flats give to your walk!
Sandler of Boston dreamed
them up for smart young America, calls them “Ballet
You'll want
Americanas."”
wear, sports and dates.
Golden peach suede
Cotton candy stripe .
Cherry suede |
RERRAALS
