Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 10 May 1946 — Page 27

0, 1948 | ions

Crystal dress,

smbines the | league plan, would call its own con- | 2nd Sikhs in Pakistan, | By PHILIP WECK ber lets him worry. Or if the cusblack top. stitutional convention and establish| Advocates admit that the agri-| United Press Staff Correspondent | tomer wants to talk, a good. barber its own government. {culture industries in the Hindu | CHICAGO, May 10.—A barber, | talks, It's tough.” cotton pique, The league's planners suggest districts of the Pakistan provinces'g,y pgentivenga said today, is a| He also has to know sanitation. O11 3 Drante that the next stage probably Would lend economic stability tothe == oo. 0 4 yairout in a na- (8nd scalp diseases, with special d of the lot is would bring Pakistan's co-operation DEW state. emphasis an sanitation. taccato black with Hindustan and Britain, They| Despite suggestions that a cor- tion of longhairs. “Everything's sanitation today,” e pattern of think a temporary military and| ridor between the zone might be| That's one of the reasons, he said,| gajd Mr. Bentivenga, who has been

rnating with jockey-brighs

| | the all-India Moslem league is insisting on in the current British cabinet

| Congress’ determination that India shall remain one country.

| porters now imagine it, would be the he league, has so far opposed the | fifth largest nation in the world. complete division of India. | Only China, Russia, the United | Unfortunately, from the league's | States and the remainder of India— |viewpoint, India’s Moslems do not!

FRIDAY, MAY 10, 1048 _ nf hi

JOSLEN LEA \GUE-

v

“WANTS NEW STATE

- Ambition Collides With I Determination otindian National

_ Congress to Keep India as One Country. By PHILLIPS TALBOT

Times Foreign Correspondent SIMLA, India, May 10—"Pakistan”--the grand vision of a new | Islamic state vastly larger than any existing Moslem country—is what

. mission negotiations on the political future of India. The league’s ambition collides head on with the Indian National

“parkistan,” as its Moslem sup-

to be called “Hindustan”—count|all live in one region. greater populations than the 106,-| Two-thirds, or about 60,000,000 000,000 residents of the six provinces however, reside in northwestern that the Moslem league claims. | provinces, the Punjab-Sind fron Complete independence and sov-|tier, and unincorporated province ereignty is the keynote of the Pak- of Baluchistan or the distant north- |

| istan . At this moment, when | eastern bloc of Bengal and Assam, . the British are offering to hand over The league now claims the entire

political control, the Moslem league six provinces for Pakistan, though! argues that the British and the only 56 per cent of the total popu- |

| Congress Es must agree that jation are Moslems.

Hindus ‘and nations.

Moslems are separate Creates Minority Problem

insisted that it will not accept any ja new minority problem, The league political settlement except division | asserts that Moslem minorities in of Indias into Pakistan and Hindu. | Hindustan would stand hostage for stan. Each state, according to the | the good treatment of the Hindus

commercial treaty with Britain required, planners now say that a

might hel kistan get orf its feet. free passage will be adequate. Kara8 181) prance ry chi and Calcutta would be the]

| principal outlets to the world.

Hollywood's blond Helen Chapman smilingly salutes after being named an honorary skipper of the U. S. merchant marine. During foreign trade week, in Los Angeles, she will preside

over celebration of peacetime re. sumption of America’s world-wide sea-borne commerce,

‘CHICAGO, May 10 (U, P.).—Julius (Dolly) Weisherg, notorious gambler, nightclub operator and prohibition era hoodlum, faced a death sentence today for the slaying of an automobile dealer in a loop bar, | Weisberg, who for years had operated without interference from the law, turned wghite-as the jury returned a Surprise verdict last, .pight, which found him guilty and imposed death in the electric. chair. The jury had debated only two hours. Prosecutors had not demanded the death. penalty, and showed their own surprise at the jury's verdict. Weisberg was convicted of shooting to death Joseph McNight, Evanston, Ill, last Oct. 23 in an argument over the sale of a used car. Weisberg claimed McNight set the price $300 above the: ceiling. He claimed he shot in self-defense after seizing McNight's gun. Witnesses, however, said he returned the gun to a shoulder holster after the shooting.

OnE om eague s satty| Paks wou. ners, cone 50 Here's Why You're Lucky

To Visit Your Barber for $1

why the price of haircuts is going up all over the country.

Mr. Bentivenga, who is president water and some barbers not even

clipping customers for 55 years. “It used ‘to be we could use soap and

_ THE. INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

[GAMBLER FACING _ CHAIR FOR KILLING!

cs, top-flighs lof the Master Barbers’ association that. Now you put your tools in a have devel- The two Indian nations they pro-| The name Pakistan is created sr Chicago, said that the barber no| sterile solution and you use a clean S obes for every | pose, would agree by treaties to a from the initials of Punjab, Afghan er is a mere hair snipper. Hel towel on every customer and if you § x to ballroom. ‘joint executive body with limited | (residents of the frontier province), i Foie don't the or, come around i Spells Gift-Magie Mother's Day —playclothes: i functions. The central executive | | Kashmir, Sind, with its final syl- | _ A skin specialist. and you lose your license.” § . 5 city, country: | would be. sranted fonts. but. Jack lable (stan) from Baluchistan. The| X A psychologist. Barbers are overworked, Mr. i ning gowns; gr ’ present meaning, however, excludes| 3 A sanitation expert. Bentivenga said, and fighting a : : ie or costumes— taxation powers, [the native state Kashmir and in- | 4 A stylist. > shortage of help. ¢ Such artful, feminine tailoring in these boudoir beauties. eek at Ayres’, Possible centrally controlled sub-‘eludes the -northeastern zone. | It should be worth a dollar or, “We don't even get time for hair- i : ; em jects would be: Administration, |C™PILEn I thd tS hen, Times| 1 re. he said, to have your hair cut|cuts” he said. “Tats way goise She’ll applaud their lovely lines. . . their cool, comfortable . ry troops ———— by an expert with all those qualifi-| barbers you see keep their hair . i . rty jot fo commen @slense, ENGINEERS TO HEAR cations | trimmed short, so it will last a long { ways—making them lovely incentives for warm weather joint communications, customs, and “ : 4 y will be held § SPEEDWAY HEADS “It's not like the old days,” Mr. ume. - < . i foreign policy. The executive would Bentivenga said. “Today a barber| “With the customers it's different. dreaming. Make your choice today from our by the Ladies | not be sovereign as either state! An open discussion on “What's has to be somebody in the com-| Everything for the men now is long »

Shore Country Eckhart is im fesdames FE. J, | k, Lows Par © : :

tor dio

might withdraw at will

New in Racing” will highlight the munity. He's a merchant. That's

This scheme, the planners point meeting of the Indiana section, so- | why he’s worth more money.”

out, is not a fixed league policy. ciety of automotive engineers, at

For instance, he said, the barber long on top.” If the Pakistan principle is accept-i8 p. m. Thursday in the Antlers] | who talks all the time is out. ed, compromises on procedure are hotel. Speakers will include Wilbur | stead, he has to sense ‘the moods of the barber's worst stumbling- -block. likely. |Shaw, president of the Indianapolis | his customers and know when to} | style.

The plan, however, turns directly Motor Speedway, and A. 'W. Her- keep still,

against the congress’ insistence on rington, chairman of the board of |

\ sovereign central government for Marmon-Herrington Co. and chair-| venga,

\ whole free India. Britain, while sometimes favoring of the supreme court of racing.

| to worry all the time.

“These days” said Mr. Benti-| want the crew haircut, short on “with OPA, coal shortage, top,” he said. “Maybe not.” A barman of the A. A. A. contest board | strikes, customers sometimes want| ber has to guess those things. He A good bar-| has to be ahead of everybody else.”

In-

hair. A little trim on the sides, 'a shingle up the back and leave it

And that led Mr. Bentivenga to

“Maybe next year everybody will

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