Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 28 March 1946 — Page 7

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HIGH COSTS AID JAP FISHERMEN

New Laws Cause Hardship Among: Other Classes.

By SIDNEY B. WHIPPLE Seripps-Howard Staff Writer : ENOSHIMA, Japan, March 28.— There is great activity all along the shore of Sagami Bay. Every village, from the shores of the Izu peninsula to the beaches below Yokosuka, has shaken off its winter sluggishhess and gone to work. The sand dunes that stretch in an almost unbroken line for a hun-

dred miles along the coast are!

thickly crowded with black fishing boats being made ready for the sea. On both sides of the highway are stretched miles of fishing nets. Carts piled high with cordage for ropes and nets, and with lumber for 11 vessels pass through the viles. And the entire populace is engaged in carpentry, repair, and refitting for the new season. Fresh fish is beginning te come into the market, Fisherman Hard Worker

The Japanese fisherman, like the farmer, is a hard worker. Sails are gcarce on the little vessels, and he works his way to sea by means of Sweeps, manipulated from the high stern of his vessel. Sagami Bay, in this season, is rough and subject to

THURSDAY, MARCH 28,

1946 _

ow

Toy, red wagons assembled and painted by members -of Cub Scout Pack No. 160 will be donated to day nurseries and orphanages in

the city according to Roy Davis, cub scoutmaster, of 1823 E. 34th st.

than the hirame. The Japanese utilize every part of the fish, from mouth to the tail. One of the most popular fishes is the maguro. This is a heavy fellow, about the size of a halibut, It

has coal-black skin and its meat is several shades darker red than

raw

> Cub Pack Makes Red Wagons for Tots = *

Cub Scouts of Pack 169...Orphans will benefit from their handiwork. ;

The young group, part of whom are pictured above; live in the vicinity of 35th st. and Keystone ave. and attend public school 69.

The pack was organized last May under the sponsorship of the Op-

' By ANDY ANDERSON Seripps-Howard Staff Writer BELLINGRATH GARDENS, Ala.

Fishing Lodge Grows Into All-Year Garden Pa radise © and another set tomorrow.!

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES 5

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By JAMES M. HASWELL Times Special Writer WASHINGTON, March 28.-—-0Oon-gress is writing a charter of rights for citizens who deal with federal administrative agencies. : The McCarran « Sumners bill which covers these rights” has passed the senate and reached the house. It has been 10 years in the making. When congress created agencies to license airlines, regulate radios, build dams, fix prices, police labor disputes, and do hundreds of other things, it provided no laws to guide their conduct. The agencies were turned . loose to make their own rules, settle disputes in their own ways, and enforce their own decisions. Frequently, such government became personal government instead of government by rule. Decisions reflected shifting desires and aims of men temporarily holding office. The citizen never quite knew where he stood. He had to “obey the board” governing his business, But the board might be one set of men

| timist club and the Keystone Ave- | nue-34th Street Civic league. E. L. | Gray of 3706 Orchard ave. serves as representative of both sponsors. Cub scout committee chairman {for the boys is C. E. Keyler of 3122 IN. Keystone ave.

Now congress is writing a basic code for the conduct of administra- | tive agencies which is to govern| their activities wherever a specific]

|ingrath of Mobile, Ala., liked fish{ing so much, he built a lodge that grew into a year-round paradise—a

Bill Charts Ways to Deal With Government Agencies

| making.”

March 28.—Because Walter D. Bell- | once-upen-a-time place from the

salmon. Cut in steaks, it retails at sudden storms. about $2. : But if prices are maintained at| Small fish, about the size to make . their present level, it should be a|one gulp at a goldfish eating con- | profitable season for the fisherman, | test, sell for two yen apiece. Only the rich will be able to buy | There is considerable grumbling his wares, for the new financial [over such prices. Before the govlaws have created a critical strin- | ernment restrictions went into efgency in the ordinary population's |fect, limiting the family purchasing currency. |ability to an average of about 500 Hirame, a white, flounder-like [yen a month, and sequestering all fish, and very good eating, too, costs |the rest of the family cash, the 34 ‘yen a pounid, which makes it Japanese scarcely realized prices about 75 cents a portion when it |were high. They had their war reaches the table, Itoyori, with a {earnings and savings. Currency red and gold skin like a sea-going (was plentiful, and you could algoldfish, is even more expensive, (ways see crowds of poorly dressed but it comes in slightly larger sizes buyers around the fish stalls, wav-

ing fists full of 100-yen notes at the seller,

But today these same people, their money now frozen in the bank or postoffice, are suddenly remembering that time was when a whole hirame or itoyori could be bought for one yen. They are also beginning to question other prices. Since their money was frozen black bread has risen. from 1.04 yen for one kin (three small loaves) to 3.12 yen. And milk from 1 yen a small bottle to 2. There is trouble in store—for the shopkeeper,

Or for the government.

for many weeks to come!

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| fairy books. | Bellingrath picked out a plot of i ground on the Fow] river and built his lodge in 1917. From his home |in Mobile he took azaleas, camellias, (roses, hydrangeas, gardenias and | other lush flowers and transplanted them’ around the secluded river | house. To Be Perpetuated The flowers thrived and Belling{rath and wife made a trip to Eu- | rope to study old garderis there. A | French landscape artist was called lin and an American architect em|oved to design a house that would {harmonize with the landscape. Ex|actly 15 years after the fishing lodge was erected, Bellingrath gardens were opened to the public. { The enthusiastic owners did not | anticipate the response. Sightseers {virtually stampeded the grounds, {and traffic cops were engaged to | untangle the jam on the twisting {little road from Theodore, Ala. The continual flow of crowds necessitated a crew of 25 gardeners and |an admission fee to maintain. the | 100-acre plot.

law does not cover them. | The McCarran-Sumners bill is}

designed to provide administrators | with a simple course to -follow in| making administrative decisions. It, will state clearly the jurisdiction! of courts, about which there has been much dispute. |

Wilk Know Their Rights It will give persons affected by! these administrative powers a means of knowing what their rights | are and how they may be pro- | tected. { The bill will do six principal things if adopted. ONE: It will turn daylight on the ordinary activities of federal administrative agencies where no good purpose is served by secrecy. TWO: It will require agencies to adopt and publish the rules they go by, and so define in advance the things a citizen must and afust not do. :

THREE: It will prescribe a sys-

tem for administration.

FOUR: It will Jay down a system for settling disputes,

Profit resulted, and the big-| { hearted Bellingraths set up an en- | | dowment s0 that the gardens could | | be perpetuated, and surplus revenue | turned over to a fund for educat- | ing underprivileged boys. Acres of Roses The gardens are planted to pro-| vide an all-year show. Camellias] | start blooming in October and last am

until April. Azaleas try to crowd | amellias out of the spotlight | |in ear arch, when the fragrance | lof sweet olive fills the air. In|

late spring, dog bursts forth, | [ll and sprigs of spiraea-add touches |

{of color to the 500-year-bid oaks. | In May, hydrangeas and gat-| | denias bloom, with crepe myrtle, | |oleander, hibiscus, allamanda and heavily-scented - magnola following. And there are acres of roses. | Even babbling brooks, rocks and |rills one has only read about are {present to delight the- thousands who stroll through the grounds |every Sunday, and form a fairyland {setting to the stately English-style {house that rises above the heavy | foliage. One visitor commented that it {was a “place for the UNO to meet.” But a plain old potlicker fisherman {like myself could only remark, | | “Boy, what a fishin’ camp.” {

| —————— re _— —— SEEKS BRIDE WHO CAN MAKE BUTTER IDAHO FALLS, Idaho, March 28 (U, P.).—Colin MacKensie put up a sign in a cafe yesterday, It reed: ; “Will marry any farmer's daughter who has a cow and can make butter.” It was signed “Desperate.” “I've tried everything else to get

butter,” MacKenzie said. “Maybe this will work.”

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FIVE: It will provide for judicial | review where appropriate. SIX: It will"transfer the examiners employed by the various agencies—the fleld men who go but | and hold hearings, determine facts, | make reports, recommend decisions —to civil service status. The pure

pose will be to give them security | and independence of agency “policy

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The last attempt to bring order into the administrative agency field was in 1940. President Roosevelt at that time vetoed the Walter-Logan bill on the ground an attorney general's committee had not finished | its studies. Then the war delayed | action, {

Copyright, 1948. by The Indianapolis Times | and The Chicago Daily News, Ine. |

CHILD DROWNS IN TANK

BERNE, March 28 (U, P,).—~Two-

| year-old Samuel Veles drowned | 130 E. Market St. MA, 1301 yesterday when he fell into a water | i“ I Corp. tank on the farm of his father, | Member. Federal Deposit Insurance Corp .

John Velez, while he was playing. | Gilat ) i” \

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