Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 14 May 1946 — Page 23

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’, 14, 1946

rporal bo 'lke’

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insisted he had

broke in with: corporal’s word y know what he onel, I want you in about a week yu think of the

d Mess lieutenant and is one thing I good mess.” He ait to send him

st army regulaimanding officer e must taste the

sald: “I don't happen to this Cpl. Dutton. lained later all uard agreed the yen, Eisenhower all his buddies.”

) PLANS GREETING

nd., May 14 (U, xday prepared a leet Adm. Chesduled to receive degree at Notre norrow.

"Donnell, presi- , will greet Adm. s by plane from «m. ugh downtown he Notre Dame d. he university's et the admiral, ceive the degree ation at 3 p. m. all. A reception * will follow.. be accompanied rig; U. 8. N. R,, Comdr. E. B. marine congresnor winner, the

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BY PHILLIPINES

New Republic Handicapped For at Least 3 Years.

By SIDNEY B, WHIPPLE Soripps-Howard Staff Writer MANILA, May 14, — The new| Philippine republic in its first three | years will need a half-billion dol- | lar loan to survive the economic

crisis, according to leading economists here. One of the main reasons for the, visit of President-elect Roxas to] the United States | is to convince the | U. 8. of the necessity of fur-| nishing financial | aid to the infant Money to be] provided by the] way of the Tyd-| ings rehabilita- | tion bill would | pay perhaps 50 | per cent of the war damage, but|

Mr. Whipple

bookkeeping, validate claims and | set up machinery for claim payments. This country’s economy is based primarily on agriculture and it will be about three years before, production ean approach pre-war levels. Rice is the nation’s No 1 crop, and water buffalo are needed to cultivate rice. Japs killed 60 per cent of the buffalo. One animal used to cost 85 pesos. Now one costs 400 or more pesos and must be imported from Indo-China or other Asiatic countries.

Sugar Output Down

|

A water buffalo must be three Gerald W., Landis

TUESDAY, MAY, 13,1946

it will take years to accomplish tlve| Miss Margaret McDaniel . . . She finger paints with both hands but “still manages to handle the rural

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“= THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

Mixing Paints With. Work Puts Color in a Dull Day JET PLANES SET [

FOR MASS SHOW

‘Test to Demonstrate Ease Of Shuttle Flight.

By MAX B. COOK Seripps-Howard Aviation Editor

NEW YORK, May 14.-A ful |operating fighter squadron of 25 P-80 [Shooting Star jet planes—probably [the largest flight of jet-propelled fighters in history—will take off {from March fleld, Cal, tomorrow {for a mass transcontinental flight. The flight will demonstrate how quickly defensive fighting planes ‘can get from any point in the {United States to any other point in| case of attack, In the case of the| P-80's the top time would be under five hours. as one Shooting Star {already has crossed the nation in 8 little over four hours. | Two stops will be made en route {=-one at Ft. Worth and the other | at Memphis, Tenn.

Go to Washington Demonstrations of jet plane air-

i

|

exchange at Markelsville,

Washington Bureau { : WASHINGTON, May l4—Rep.| that a ripple on the town surface is enough to provide talk for weeks. | oa rrving extra equipment. The en- ’ v ‘| —— y

(R. Ind) said|

worthiness in tactical flights will! be given at each city. One day will]

JENNER VICTORY Little Things in Markleville be er 2 orn an oa

in Memphis

{ington, D. C.. where, on Sunday, | May 19. the greatest jet plane flight '

SEEN BY LANDIS Make Big Talk in Small Town reminus or we sone i wan

By VICTOR PETERSON, Times Staff Writer | exhibition in history wil] be staged

MARKLEVILLE, Ind, May 14—There was no reason in the world probably at Bolling fleld, acroce

Also Predicts State ‘Sure to to go to Markleville. The car just followed the engine like a horse from National airport. Go Republican.’

follows his head. " eA ties tiny Flying in a day ahead of the The city marker noted that some 250 people live in the tiny town. | squadron will be a C-47 transport |

Most of them are retired farmers leading a quiet life so easy-going | plane and a C-82 Packet cargo ship

But very few things even ripple) gines will be used to demonstrate | here, and life goes on day after day who has a finger on every indi-|the speed with which the ground

AT DRUGS

Shortage Lowers Quantity of Streptomycin,

By JANE STAFFORD Selence Service Medical Editor PHILADELPHIA, May 14. — The

meat shortage may be the blame in

part for the short supply of strepe tomyein, ; : In production of the drug which is penicillin's pdtent ally in fights ing germ diseases, a need for beef pancreas was cited specifically by Dr. Chester 8. Keefer of Boston at the American College of Physicians | maeting here, i { Trypsin enzyme from beef pan creas is needed for the preparation of streptomycin from the crude brew of soil organisms which proe duce the drug. | Beef pancreas, however, is also | needed to produce insulin for diabetes. At present insulin is also a high priority on the pancreas sup. ply because there is not any too much insulin without which thoue sands of diabetics would die. Production Difficult : bo | Streptomycin production: fs much ha more difficult than penicillin pro. duction and the yield per quantity Capt. Eddie Rickenbacker, famous flier, is shown recelving am 1% fluid is smaller. About 10 times . {as much streptomycin by weight award for distinguished service to humanity from Mrs. Charles 8, ‘as penicillin is required to treaf a Clark, president of a conference of women's club presidents and pro- | patient. . From one-thirtieth to one-eighth of an ounce of streptomycin is ree uired daily in the average case.

gram chairmen at a meeting in Chicago, It must be given by injection every three to four hours. This also

First A-Bomb Test Site to Be a Converted Into National Park|me seen wo want

Honor Eddie Rickenbacker

TG Cow

*

years old before it can be used for today that “it looks like Bill Jen-| ch tne same as the day before viduals pulse. [crews can remove an engine, re-

rice plowing. {ner w y ) i ner” when asked who will get the f that. | tside the old frame house Sugar, next most important crop, | 3 |and the day before Outside a place it and get the jet plane back

‘ G. O. P. senatorial nomination in| World topics excite some com- hangs a sign with a bell design. In- into the air. cannot be ‘produced in quantity be- | p : | ot : . ; en-| , - y what we would find fore 1049. The Filipinos must re- Indiana at the Indianapolis conven {ment but by and large the big do side we knew at ‘Brass’ to- Attend

i pd. y seated at the switchbuild their s p {tion June 13. lings are the little things that city... a Woman sea P suger export ifade Tro Former short-term Senator Wil-! folks overlook. It is quite the news board of a rural exchange. From the time the Shooting Star lands, taxis to its position, has its

the ground up because Japs seized) the A on as soon es ar. iam E. Jenner is out to unseat when a town resident is going out av rived and then destroyed sugar- | Republican Senator Raymond E. of the county for a week-end visit,! - AND THERE at the board sat | engine taken out, a new one inmaking machinery. The Japs didn’t! Willis. A third entry in the race, and births and “deaths and mar- Miss Margaret McDaniel busy with. 11.4 and again takes to the air,

Receive One-Fourth of Supply | keep souvenir-hunters from carry-| Dr. Keefer's committee of the Nae WASHINGTON, May 14, — The ing away the glasslike bits of fused | tional Research Council which allo- | national park service is Waiting for c..4 jart by the bomb burst cates streptomycin for civilian use : § is now gettin, t on | the army 10 surrender the site of An atomic museum. Whose ex- total Siting aio one-fourth the [the worlds Arst atomic bomb X* hibits would include one of thé] THe rest is going to the army, | plosion > that X Sen begin €on-fplanes which dropped the bombs Navy, public health service, and vet. | verting the area Into a park. { {erans administration, - This supply | Park officials say the site in|°D Hiroshima or Nagasaki, isamong|, " t enough to treat one thos

By Scripps-Howard Newspapers

start another crop. Rep. Charles M. La Follette, Was|rigges are momentous events. [her lines. As we walked in she| EE i tobacco suffered rated as having “no chance” by Mr.| “ a-n | was saying: | probably not more thah 30 minutes similarly. Hemp and tobacco pro- Landis. LOUNGERS on the main corner| “There you are. Go ahead. duction may get under way before! ‘Everyone Griping’ couléhy't “rightly guess” anything Waiting. Are you through? But that of rice and sugar. { He made his report upon return-|’ "i : Bo ts" that] Crater, there's no use ringing Food shortages will reach their ing from the state after the primary W&$ ong on ~herea Al lagain. I know they aren’t home. crisis this summer. There is a dire election. Indiana is sure to go Re-| Would make a news story . . * Lem went to fetch a load of hogs

lack of meats, fats and dairy prod-|publican in the fall, Mr. ‘Landis | everybody did about the same or |and Millie's. gone to an auction.” ucts, all of which must be imported. asserted. | their neighbor, just nothing at a ‘| Now there is no story there to Nevertheless, this fertile land-is| “Everyone has a gripe about| But there is one pores Jie | the people on the Markleville expotentially rich in . agricultural something and my vote against such little towns as Markley | change, but there was something products and from such natural re- OPA met with approval,” Mr. Lan-| {very different about the set-up sources will the nation’s ultimate dis declared. or dry beans on one shopping tour | around the switchboard. security grow. | “I intend to vote against the of Vincennes, Mr. Landis said. As “ = = -_-—————— British loan also, The returned a member of the house Republican! wnj§§ McDANIEL'S hands were FORMER MAYOR OF

| soldiers I talked to do not want to|food study committee he will ask myiti-cqlored, the trunk lines were give the British anything, not even for an investigation, he said, isplotched with more of the same. TERRE HAUTE DIES food. we owe more than England “I think the whole food question She swung to the left on her swivel TERRE HAUTE. Ind. May 14 (u, 20d Russia combined so why should’ should be explored and I feel con- chais and there stood an easel. P) —Rites will be held tomorrow We be making loans we can never yinced that the mishandling by this | On it was no canvas, just a piece for Joseph P. Duffy, 70, former |Collect? administration will result in a na-|of cardboard. - But there nearly mayor of Terre Haute and a city Will Ask Food Probe {tional scandal” Mr. Landis coh-| finished was a fine head study of judge for eight years. “If “the export-import bank and cluded. {Abraham Lincoln done in brown, Mr. Duffy died yesterday after an Bretton Woods don’t work now, our; ge denied that he is the “Repub- | bronze and gold oil colors. iliness of several months. lending every nation money will not jjcan congressman from southern| Now Miss McDaniel is a story In He was mayor from 1939 to 1943. Work either. At least it will not' rndiana” who was reportedly “up herself. Her job is no eight hours The widow, a daughter and two Work to our benefit.” to his ears in the political beer a day for five days a week. She

sons survive, | He could not obtain bread, butter, racket.” Jem a ell be an vain ee

on duty 24-hours-a-day, seven days a week.

» ~ ” “THAT DOESN'T give me time to do much of anything,” she said. “So I just have to amuse myself. Several years ago I went to the state fair in Indianapolis and saw what I thought were some very pretty paintings. And, oh, how I wished I could do the same. “Time would hang pretty heavy so I thought I would try this painting business. Never had a lesson in my life but I guess a person can learn a lot just by making mistakes.”

Girls’ Store, Fifth Floor

za Fd ,

done For while ‘many of her “cardboards,” they can't be calléd i ® canvases for she paints on the back . of old cigaret, hair oil and bread k posters, still are very amateurish, she is developing a style all her own with skill and surety. “I guess I just am awfully messy at this work,” Miss McDaniel said. “I can't seem to get the hang of using brushes. I don't have any trouble getting the colors I want but these brushes stump me.” With that she put another dab of color on Lincoln. And as she answered the phone shé reached out with her left hand. With her little finger she stroked the cardboard. Then she used the heel of her palm to give a swirl to the hair IN ~ ” ” A TURNING FULL to the painting again, she worked on an eyebrow with her right hand. She seemed

COTTON CHARMER

SUB-JR. SIZES a little surprised that anyone “ should think it pdd to paint with either hand.

“I must do it without thinking about it,” she said. . “But I do wish I could use a brush. All the good painters do, put maybe it will work sut. Several months after I found I could work best with my fingers someone told me that fingerpainting was all the rage,” she said. Probably more artists could do better if they followed the lead of summer scene with this the rural exchange operator in Markleville , , . throw away the brush and use their fingers.

i 3

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Teena Paige sweetens the

crisp, cool dress in rayon

butcher linen. Comes

in sparkling colors—and it's

easy to launder. Styled especially for Sub Juniox

sizes 9 to 15,

{| Roman Clényér whitens, removes many stains; saves | the wear of hard rubbing. | Easy directions on label.

| wil be required. It will not be sur- | year. The army has continued 'nterior department's grazing serv-

| commanding general of the tactical| when the job is completed.

AND THAT is just what she has|

southern New Mexico may bel the park service's plans. |sand patients per month. opened to public inspection within|~ The desert waste is owned by He Present cost is $15 for a thirtieth | of an ounce but this is bei i prising however, if the time is cut|jts control over the area for se-| ice, which turned it over to the|ny 5 grant from the SiS pa to between 15 and 20 minutes. | curity reasons—work is still going Army for target and bomb ranges. Within the next month or six The flight probably will be led on there—but has agreed to turn The test bomb was exploded in weeks CPA hopes to be able allow by Maj. Gen. Elwood R. Quesada, (it back to the interior department the pre-dawn of July 16, 1045, about commercial distribution of streptoe {three weeks before the Hiroshima mycin for treatment of tularemia, air forces. All of the army “brass”| Trails, paths and roads built for attack. The explosion was seen influenza, meningitis and those uri’ available in the east is expected to|the first test will become part of 250 miles away, but its origin was nary tract infections for which attend the demonstration in Wash- | the park land. The park service not disclgsed until the first bomb neither penicillin nor sulfa drugs ington. | plans to patrol the bomb crater to had been dropped in Japan. {are effective,

»

What Smart Indianapolis Women Will Wear at The Races . ..

Photographed at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway . .. Charles J. Bell, Tower Studio

It's a case of mutual admiration—and especially for the girl wearing

the Carlye Junior Original chambray dress. Topped off with a battle jacket top

It comes in pink, blue, green stripes on gray. 14.95.

Now at H. PP, Wasson & Company’s Junior Shop, Second Floor