Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 25 April 1946 — Page 1
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VOLUME 57—NUMBER 39
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BANDITS ‘FLEE POLICE GUNFIRE IN WILD CHASE
Hold Up Two Gas Stations, Make Escape From 15 Squad Cars.
A quartet of bandits who careened into the path of a patrol car as they fled from a holdup early today slipped through the fingers of 15 city, state police and sheriff squads after a wild auto chase. An arnly jacket attired leader and his three confederates stuck up two filling stations within an hour. They are believed to be the same men who staged a $6500 kidnaprobbery on the near South side yesterday. ; Pursued by one squad of police as they fled the scene of a hold-up, the bandits abandoned a stolen car and fled on foot near 4500 W. Washington st. Police bullets failed to halt the men, State police, deputies and additional city police squads who had been radioed for help combed an area around the New York Central railroad at W, Washington st. near Vine st. but the bandits disappeared.
Police Are Alerted
Police were alerted for the bandits after three men wearing army jackets kidnaped Arthur L. (Jack) Skidmore, tavern operator, and his six-year-old niece, Nancy Louise Ferguson, as they left Fountain Square State bank yesterday after- , hoon. The gunmen forced the pair into Mr. Skidmore's car and drove them around several minutes before fleeihg with $6500 which Mr. Skidmore had withdrawn from the bank. About 2 a. m. today police were
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Victims of Kidnap Bandits
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Kidnap-robbery victims . . . Arthur ‘L. Skidmore and his niece, |jquor license after Marion county Nancy Louise Ferguson.
called to the Wake-Up station, 1250 Roosevelt ave. Four men whose descriptions tallied with the kidnap-
Leo Durocher robbers had held up Bonnie Hinkle, ° ° 47, the tL, : Acquitted in
Loot Undetermined !
Driving into the station in a Assault Case
dark sedan, the leader pointed a gun at Mr. Hinkle as he came out| NEw YORK, April 25 (U., P.).— of the station. One other bandit {1 es Durocher, fiery and loquacious held a gun at Mr. Hinkle's side a8| manager of the Brooklyn Dodgers, his confederate searched the at-|g.s scquitted today on a charge of tendant. They took an. undeter-ige.ond degree assault. The charge mined amount of cash and sped|grose out of a dispute with a fan west on Roosevelt ave. at Ebbets field. Less than 50 minutes later, the same bandits held up Guy Cull Jr, 21, of 806 N. Denny st. attendant at a Gaseteria station— 1702 W. Washington st. They took $17 from the attendant and sped west on Washington st. Just as the description of the|¥%, holdup men was being broadcast, |” the bandit car swerved in front of | a squad car cruising at Holmes|:* ave, and W. Washington st. : Two-Block Lead They had a two-block lead by the time Patrolmen Ray Porter and Frederick Vogel could turn the carjtimes a week to heckle around to pursue them. Bums.” The bandit car skidded to a halt| He charged that near Vine st. The gunmen made afand Mr. Moore took him under the getaway running down the New| stands during a night game between York Central tracks as both patrol-|the Dodgers and Philadelphia on men fired at them, =“ June 9 and beat him with a blackThe bandit car was one stolen] jack and Mr. Durocher also hit him from Otis Andry, 1545 Cottage ave. |with his fists. early yesterday morning, police said. The license was one stolen from Albert C. Thompson, 1543 S. Earl st, about midnight last night. Meanwhile, investigation
at Ebbets also was not guilty
fans and a non- * baseball - addict.
' erated 43 minutes. Fi en The" defendants Sl ids had been accused Durocher of striking John Christian, a war veteran who used to go to Ebbets field three or four “Them
(Continued on Page 3—Column 1)
Simic een «ve DEMAND ELIMINATION * OF RECREATION FEES
Industrial Council Protests Park Department Plans.
STAMP 49 GOOD FOR 5 LBS. OF SUGAR
WASHINGTON, :April 25 (U. P.). —8pare stamp 49 in ration book No. 4 will be good for five pounds of sugar beginning May 1, the OPA said today. It will remain valid until Aug.
Elimination of
manded today by the Indianapolis Industrial Union council (C. IL. O.). The council recommended that even golf fees be reduced. In a resolution protesting
31. OPA said that on the basis of estimated current and prospeétive sugar supplies, it “expects the same
special patrolman : 4 field, | that - big business is trying to kil
found ; OPA so it can ! . by a Of the profits” from resulting high-T faction
jury of 11 Dodger er prices.
fees, except those on golf, was de-|
PLOT AGAINST OPA IS
ness Wants ‘Cream.’ (Another OPA Story, Page 25)
WASHINGTON, April 25 (U. P)
Joseph Moore, a —James B. Carey, sécretary-treas-urer of the C, I. O, said today
Mr. Carey
senate banking committee, which | The jury delib- | 18 considering extension of price
{control beyond its June 30 expira{tion date. He joined a group of independen
businessmen in attacking
trols.
“When the N. A. M. makes a plea Mr. Durocher | for free competition, it is arguing
{ for ,more and more economic dom- | ination through curtailed produc- [ tion, consequent scarcity of goods, | high peices and relatively low | wages,” Mr. Carey said.
Refuse to ‘Thke Blame
{ first and skim off the cream of the | profits.” |
Mr. Carey said every inflationist {in the country is trying to hide be- ! hind wage increases and blame labor “for the price increases he has| | been” able to wheedle or bludgeon |
out of OPA.”
“We refuse to be the whipping]
boy for this crime,” Mr, Carey said
| “We refuse to be blamed for the
efforts of the department of agri-| X | Were found half-Starved all city recreation culture to get prices up. We ete F FORECAST smothering to death in a truck. to be blamed for the fact that the |
administration | refuses to use its powers to get low-
I'civilian “production
{ priced production out of the plants
to prevent hoarding and to stop]
black markets.”
|
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ianapolis
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FORECAST: Fair and cooler tonight and, tomorrow, “Light frost tomorrow night.
THURSDAY, APRIL 25, 1946 ny
°
Bumper
Entered as Second-Class Matter at Postoftice
#4
sate
dianapolis 9, Ind. Issued daily except Sunday
‘ 9 NAPERVILLE, IIL, April 25 (U. P.).—Twelve per-
sons were reported killed
today when two westbound | Burlington streamliners
collided in Naperville,
Owner of Castle Barn Says He'll ‘Kowtow te No Political Faction.’
Castle Barn, suburban night club which was the center of a recent ? liquor license controversy and scene bodies taken away and of & raid by state excise officers, has! geyven more waiting to be closed its doors “for the duration
. removed from the scene.
cident did not reveal the number injured. An Aurora man who was present at the time of the crash said he saw five
of liquor in politics’ i
John H. williams, operator of the
club, said he would keep his place, of business closed so long as = JUSTICE STONE is politics in the liquor business. |
“Maybe a change in officials in| the coming election will be the| answer,” he said. “The good citizens of Indianap-| - olis are no longer in control of! their own city but must give up High and Low Join in bag and baggage to that political | ) . Final Tribute.
element which seeks to force its! own will as it sees fit.” WASHINGTON, April 25 (U, P). | —The capital paid final tribute to He referred to the recent refusal|{ grarian Fiske Stone, 12th chief of the state alcoholic beverages| j stice of the United States, at commission to grant his club a|.iec jn Washington's towering Episcopal cathedral today. - | Republican leaders, he said, de-| president Truman, cabinet mem- | etined to approve his application | pare justices and members of con | for a permit. {gress joined hundreds of lesser citSubsequently Castle Barn Was eng gt the funeral service in the raided by excise officers Opgrating|yayjted nave of the gothic church. under the direction of the Re-
Approval Declined
of the club were arrested
| criminals and vice operators if 2 basic design. certain small clique of politicians!
are. in on the cut, but I don’t oD- erently as the Rev. Fleming James | ing industry for a royalty fund on| erate my business that way,” Mr. of Sewanee, Tenn, an old friend of | phonograph records to relieve un-
| Williams said. .
CLUB CLOSES BULLETINISAYS TRUMAN | MUST ACT SOON
First reports on the ac- |
SERVICES HELD
| : The black-draped casket of the) CHARGED eve: controlled alcoholic bev-|73_ year-old jurist who died Monday, erage commission. Several patrons|yge carriéd by uniformed supreme ——et : On| court guards through the cathe- | charges of violating the liquor 1aW.| qral's arched doorway and placed at | “It is my opinion Indianapolis {he intersection of the arms of the | was made to order for gamblers. cross which form the cathedral's
The 2500 mourners listened rev-| cessfully put the slug on the record- |
Will Cut Res
By JESSE
IN COAL CRISIS
Observers Say President, Can't ‘Ignore’ Strike Much Longer.
By EDWIN A. LAHEY
Times Special Writer WASHINGTON, April 25—The mate of 830,000,000 bushels, {annual coal crisis will in a few days | -
| expat to such proportions that the | | White House will be unable to, CRACKDOWN ON | {ignore it any longer, observers here |
| believe. | Every day empties more and more |
industrial coal bins, causing shut-
| Leading grain dealers and +
EL A
downs and layoffs,
Carnegie-Illinois Steel Corp. .al- Pastries Must Be Included ready reports 60,000 men idle be-| : In Reductions.
cause of the coal strike, By GRANT DILLMAN |be hard hit. United Press Staff Correspondent In many ways the 1946 crisis] WASHINGTON, April 25. — The | 1s the most remarkable to date. The | government. is prepared to crack {basic industry for all other indus-|down on the country’s bakers unless {tries has been shut down for near- | they co-operate whole-heartedly in |ly four weeks—with 400,00 bitumi-|the emergency flour conservation
{nous miners and 7000 mines idle. | program, it was learned today. But for the past two weeks, the
| Railroads and utilities soon will
; . : : The government already has re- | antagonists in this dispute have ceived a few complaints that bakers | been pouting in their separate g,e apsorbing their entire 25 per quarters, rather than negotiating. | cent cut in flour supplies in their John L. Lewis walked out of the preg production—insteady of mak- | negotiations with the coal operat ino proportionate cuts both in| ors April 10 and has been sulking | bread and more profitable pies and in his elaborate offices (formerly. axes the University club) ever since— | If the { wondering what Jimmy Petrillo has| gpread, it was said, the government
PRICE FIVE CENTS
heat Harvest Assured—If Rain Comes
Exports to Hungry World
erves Before
New Crop Is Available
BOGUE
United Press Staff Correspondent CHICAGO, April 25.—The United States can expect a third consecutive bumper wheat crop—dependent upan the weather—but export of enough farm-stored grain to meet current famine needs now would cut immediate reserves far below average, grain experts said today.
processors predicted that the
winter wheat. crop would hit the government April 1 esti7,000,000 more than 1945—if
the weatherman gives the farmer a break. \ John H. MacMillan Jr. head of Cargill, Inc, nationally known Minneapolis grain firm, said that the winter wheat crop now pushing up across the grain plaing of America is “in very fine condition ... the best on record ., . but is very vulnerable for want of moisture.” In other words, the next wheat available above current reserves for feeding America and the world’s starving will be plentiful—if it’ will only rajn. Coming Weeks Vital . The next 20 days will tell abous conditions in. the Texas panhandle, where the soil is, very dry, Mr. Mac= millan said. ' The wheat crop is growing in such profusion that it needs plenty of moisture. . E. H. Mirick, vice president of the Pillsbury Mills, said at Mine neapolis that the outlook for wine ter wheat was “very promising”
situation becomes wide-| qecpite “occasional dry spots.” The
spring wheat crop is 90 days from
that he hasn't got. | wil step in with a remedial amendment to war food order No. 1. It would tell bakers specifically | how much of their available flour
Petrillo Succeeded Two years ago Mr, Petrillo suc- | supply must be used for bread and
| how much for pastries. The disclosure came as Secretary
{ ‘harvest, too far away to make pre- | dictions, he said. | A government meteorologist at | Chicago warned that dry weather | was hurting winter wheat in the | southwestern area, source for six to 10 per cent of the nation’s crop.
“skim off the cream]
‘Won't Pay Tribute’ 1! “I am not paying tri
bute to any-| dead: lone nor kowtowing to’ any group! “I am the resurrection and the (or 3 health and welfare fund.
{the chief justice, spoke the opening| employment among his musicians. {lines of the Episcopal service for the |
Mr. Lewis has been trying for) 4 2 to the |two years to get a royalty on coal | loft “2 tle ght
{of Agriculture Clinton P. Anderson... .. aa covered Northwest “Texas,
Eastern New Mexico,
4 1 Southwest {heath of “$he’ country's wheat belt. Kansas and extziine Westerns a
He will make a face-to-face plea Lo
testified before tifé| “I am getting out until the citi-|
t | stantly jeopardize their standing as
the efforts of the National Association of [Of arrest. Manufacturers to end price. con-
that feels I must play life . ..
|ball with them or get out. |lieveth in me shall never die. . .
zens of Indianapolis see fit to €n-| oo nied on Page 3—Column 2)
{force the law where law enforce-
wpe fr teint end 74 wes WIG, Jo. Dr CHIEF URGES PURGE IN CONGRESS
ATLANTIC CITY. N. J, April a . (U. P.).—Citing the lack of any If the excise officers or any aw o,.;,) jegiclation since 1937, C. I. O enforcement body want something | po cident Philip Murray today to do, they all know where to start called on the nation’s voters to in except that their hands are tied,” | purge from congress an “unholy Mr. Williams said. { Customers Not Coming
| good citizens by the constant threat
| defeating the aims of the people. He said since the raid on his{ “The United States should .think | place April 13, “customers have been! in terms of putting its house in | staying away in droves.” order, legislatively speaking.” he “It seems that honest citizens are told 1400 delegates attending the afraid now to patronize Castle Barn | fourth biennial convention of the
onviction on the second degree| —« 1v ye xists1 { c |. = ace a, as EXISIST 2 ¢ they would feel in constant fear | Textile Workers Union of America is race to K : | i. i 0 gel to the market! that any moment a group of ex- fourth largest in the C. I. O, organ-|
{ cise officers would grab them by the] ization.
whosoever liveth and be-|
: "{to discuss his The presidential family and others || swis’' refusal to discuss anything | | 3
| coalition” which he charged Was|rates for miners to conform with |™aX
Th refusal of the operators even
© ain for demand, and My | [Armersyito release their grain
| hungry peoples overseas.
'else until this health and welfare Speak at Farm Rallies
issue .is disposed of are the two| Mr. Anderson Was accompanied reasons for thé present deadlock. [by UNRRA Director General FiorelThe coal operators have been|lo H. La Guardia and Robert H. sweating it out at the Shoreham |Shields, chief of the department's
25, hotel, waiting for Mr. Lewis to come | production and marketing admin-
| istration. They were scheduled to arrive in Fargo, N. D, tonight for a “starvation” dinner. Tomorrow they will speak to farmers’ rallies at CliMinn, and Moorehead, N. D., the national wage policy estab- | before returning to Washington tolished in the steel and auto indus-| MOrTOW night. . tries, or about 18 cents per hour. | At the same time, a mobile briBut Mr. Lewis has placed discus- gade of government farm experts fanned out through the grain belt
sion of the royalty fund at the top| 1 { of the agenda and will not even in an effort to sell more farmers
| discuss his specific wage demands
{back or for something to turn up. Offered Pay Increase Before the breakdown of negotiations the operators had offered |to increase day and tonnage pay
{
(Continued on Page 3—Column 4)
| (Continued on Page 3—Column 7)
ai Ther the would be Ange. tan com =. 45 Dogs, Found Dying in Truck
printed and a complete record made { erator said. | More than 43 dogs were taken to
of their lives. They then would have to post a heavy bond and would ————————— the city dog pound today after they and
need a lawyer before they could | | breathe free air again,” the club op-
En route from Hanover, Pa, the i truck had broken down near WashTOMORROW NIGHT son st. and Audubon rd. and a | complaint was filed about mistreat-
ment of thé animals. . Several. dogs were dead, police
Lettuce, Tomatoes May Be
FIGHT PREDICTED FOR Brosnan Case CHANGCHUN, HARBIN To Jury Today
{ | The Helen Brosnan robberyshooting case was to be received by ‘Spokesman Sees End to a criminal court jury this afternoon, Compromises. |teiloktne closing arguments by |state and defense attorneys, CHUNGKING, April 25 (U. P).—| The defendant, Cleo Edwards, Is Chinese Communists are unwilling| charged with robbery and inflicting
to make further concessions to the|Ppersonal injury in the commission | National overnment, a Communist of a felony. The frst count caryles 8 ; ! |a 10 to 25 year sentence, the latter
|
| spokesman said today.
on the government offer of a 30-4 000,000
homa. r Dallas grain circles said that the Texas-Oklahoma-New Mexico crop probably would be only one-third to one-half of the government esti« mate on the winter wheat crop. Even the bonus bffer would bring little, they predicted, because farm ers had used most of their unsold grain for feed. Kansas Outlook Good But at Kansas City, Harry Robinson of the Kansas Elevators said he could not agree with reports that the southwestern comer of Kansas was suffering from dangerous conditions. x He said soaking rains in March had built up the subsoil moisture —the wet layer which lies beneath the earth's surface, He said thas | acres in Northwestern Kansas might be hurt if it does not rain in the next two or threg
| weeks.
Mr. Robinson forecast that with average weather, Southwest and South Central Kansas will get a crop of up to 125 per cent of nore mal. > All these forecasts, however, were on wheat yet to be harvested. They gave comfort, but not ime mediate satisfaction, to officials { striving to scrape up enough grain |to feed starving people abroad in
(Continued on Page 3~Column 2)
‘QUADS’ MOTHER IS
consumer ration of five pounds of sugar for each four months can
announced oY
plans of the park department to|
levy charges on additional recrea- | Tupted repeatedly by Senator Eu-
Mr. Carey's testimony was inter-
Damaged.
|said, and others were near death. | Nationalist troops must
The police said the dogs had not |they wish to take Changchun and
fight (| Ie imprisonment if guilty Yahi PLANNING U. S. TRIP
jare returned.
Edwards is sccused of robbing] HEANOR, England, April 25 (U.
be maintained.” This is the regular sugar allotment. Canning sugar is granted in addition. It explains that spare stamps are being validated because the last stamp labeled “sugar” expires| .. ..... tional facilities belong to
April 30. the people—all of us.”
TTARMVIA rt | Asserting the expanded feé sysU. S. ADVANCES $4992 will ‘increase nn re ie,
tional facilities, the council stated: “The practice of charging fees for the use of various facilities in the park department is detrimental to the common good. . . .
ON ROCKVILLE PLANT nile delinquency by denying lower-|
5 Times Washington Bureau WASHINGTON, April 25.—Rockville aay Was aqvancey Slob bY | self 0 join forces the federa WO anny 0 NANCE | minded organizations if the fight to plans for an addition to the mu-| eliminate it." The park fee system.
the council said it “condemns this vicious practice .-, .
with all like
$140,000. The funds will be made available through the bureau of com-
[ baseball and softball diamonds, has been under fire by .various -civie leagues.
The parks}
and pledges it-|
talk of “holding a line which doesn't
exist” in prices of meat, building | materials and other commodities is
| “talking fiction.”
HOODLUM FOUND SLAIN
| KANSAS CITY, Mo, April 25 (U.
|P.).—The second gang
{bullet-riddled body of Gus Nichols | 47-year-old hoodlum, in a ditch,
{
KUHN OUT OF CUSTODY
| German-American Bund, internment camp
| today.
gene D. Millikin (R. Col), who said
slaying in | five days in Kansas City was dis- |
wage groups full use of public parks, | closed “today with the findipg of the | Want at this time of the year, is would be charged with cruelty to mit government troops
: ) FRANKFURT, April 25 (U, P.) — nicipal light plant, estimated a | especially plans to charge for use of. Fritz Kuhn, former leader of the left an near Heidelberg
been fed or watered since the truck
LOCAL TEMPERATURES left Pennsylvania. 6am ...54 10a m,.,. €7 7am ...58 11 a.m ... 62 8am ..6 12 (noon) .. 63 |COgS will be taken care of, Mrs 9a m ... 69 1pm .. 64 Leona Frankfort said today. She
lsaid a private citizen had offered ‘ av Light frost, just what the truck | © pay for their food. Police officers said the driver of
gardeners in Marion county don't|i,. {.,ck. Ross Cromer, of Hanover,
{forecast by the U, 8. weatherianimals. "| bureau for tomorrow night. Tender vegetables like lettuce and! tomatoes which | show above ground would be damaged, the severity depending upon the degree of frost, according to the Marion county agriculture office. Meanwhile the crop situation in|
munity facilities, to be repaid, without interest, when construction is begun.
Times Spelling
TIMES INDEX
Amusements oe om cane 9
By ART WRIGHT Ask Me ....... 17|F. C. Othman 17 Business ......25|Dr. O'Brien ,,.17 Carnival ..... 18] J. E. O'Brien. .28
will ‘be the officials tomorrow night
Bee's Last
Semi-Finals Are Tomorrow
Arsenal Technical high school. A
Shortridge high school teachers | new board is selected each match to give as many teachers as possible
an opportunity to take part.
Indiana is becoming more acute. Yarnev. aid 1 Lack of rain has hardened the|Gen. Joseph T. McNarney said 10report plower shears must be re-|communist tendencies were trying
sharpened once a day, to cause unrest in American army
circles in Germany. At a press enn, Gen. McNarney. said, however, that there had. been no organized movement either here or in the United States in an effort to break down army
WEEK-END VACATION—
e Why not take the family
Classified .,28-30 Politics ....... 5{at the last semi-finals match of} gory grade school pupils who morale. . : ” . to one of Indiana's -attracComics ect: 31.{Radio .........31 The Times Spelling Bee in Caleb have survived the preliminary tive state parks for. the Gen. McNarney, commander of Crossword ....14|Reflections ....18| Mills hall. matches and the first semi-finals week-end? It's healinful | U. 8. forces in Europe, spoke a day
Editorials ..... 18 | Mrs. Roosevelt. 17 Forum ........ 18 | Science ....... speech department, has Meta Given... 22 Serial ...:.. 10 ‘Don Hoover. ..18 [Sports .....26 to officiate as In Indpls. .... 3 Bob Stranaha
Inside Indpls.. 17 Troop Arrivals
. Bill Mauldin... 17 | Washington ...18| Miss Eleanor Dee Theek, all of thé|appear with Richard Willlams, one Ruth Millett. 17 Women's ..20-22| English department. : Last Monday's offictals were from (Continued o
Bits
Movies veneers 24 World Affairs. 18
1
Clarence C. Shoemaker, of the will ‘be on
the
At’ that time the
¥ 4
2
Shortridge. high accepted | school stage tomorrow night at 7:30. ganization committee's invi- | 1t will be their last opportunity to 1 pronouncer. earn one of the 20 places in the udges will be Miss Ruth L. Arm- Grand Finals May 3
ong, Mrs. .Fugenia Hayden ‘and 20 finalists will
n Page 3—Column 1)
lafter he had ordered his officers to |bolster the discipline of the occu- | pation forces, asserting that its de|terioration was damaging the | American reputation and authority. He s%1d /Communist propaganda effect
recreation , . . and you can have the comforts of home as well,
® TRead all about a weekend vacation in this edition. | - [had had “very little, if any” jon the oceipation troops.
Turn to Page 17,
+ ow
we wanine 0 McNarney: ‘Reds’ Trying to. Stir G. |. Unrest in Europe’ ras apis wp) meng
He blamed the decline in morale | here.” . -
|Harbin, the spokesman warned
land shooting Mrs. Brosnan, promi-|P.)—Nora Carpenter, the English
| v TT y { ‘ a | Although the Communists offered] nent churchwoman and civic leader, barmaid who bore quadruplets to a
| tiations, he said he did not believe ! tiations, he said he did not believe), goa.ia) Judge William B. Miller [they would surrender the cities now i & am “since the Kuomintang started the
Sn SOVIETS MAY YIELD | The spokesman. said he believed Communists were too strong to per-| ON TRIESTE ISSUE
taking the ‘Big Four Ministers Gather | For Peace Treaty Talks.
two cities
|
Four foreign ministérs assembled |
FRANKFURT, April 25 (U. P.)— and discipline on too fast a pace {oday for peace treaty talks with | Eleanor,
[in redeployment, forctg rapid | gjgns that Russia may be prepar-| [shifts of skilled officers and non-| ing to yield on the thorny Trieste |
any common Anglo-American | | In a nine-point directive to his, front against the Soviet { |officers on how to tighten up dis-| * Indications that British foreign | | cipline Gen, McNagney called for| policy has taken a new tack came a’ high standard of Nff-duty con- in London dispatches coincident duct ~~ | with the arrival in Paris of For- | He sald men on bad behavior|eign Secretary Ernest Bevin. should in effect be subject to an 11 Mr. Bevin who has been in the p. m. curfew, while those on be- | forefront of repeated disputes with ‘havior would get passes as late as| Foreign Minister V. M. Molotov they wished. 7 | was sald’ now to favor a substan“Their discipline is weak, their|tially more conciliatory line toward morale is low, and their sense of|the Soviet than is being taken by duty and service impaired,” he said.| Secretary of State James F. Byrnes. The results are pwor. It appeared that Mr. Bevin may “These must be: corrected for the|be hopeful of assuming the role protection of the great conscientious|of middle man or ‘mediator bemajority and for the orderly ac-|tween the clashing American and
to another, to
Although the pound at present is to relinquish Changchun and Har-| + Bright and Hadley sts. last Oct,| married American army sergeant, |operating on a budget deficit, the pin after last month's peace nego- 20. His insanity plea was overruled | planned today
to take her-three surviving babies to the United States and marry their father as soon as possible, “I shall go to him with the three babies,” Miss Carpenter said when informed that former Sgt, William Thompson had been divorced by his wife, “It won't take me. long to pack, My departure will depend on gets . ting a passport and obtaining accommodations. He will be as pleased to see the babies as I shall be to see him.” Mr, ‘Thompson's 27-year-old wife, was granted a divorce yesterday in Pittsburgh. Attorney Sam Keller said Mr.
ground to such an extent farmers|day that “certain individuals with! smmissioned officers from one unit! issue. and that Britain is opposed | Thompson would have to marry
Miss Carpenter within three days after her arrival in the United States.
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