Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 28 May 1946 — Page 12

ni

Future as (Continued From Page One)

pounds, with a waist line of about 50 inches and a chest measure | somewhat less. : : I told him also that my man liked a good cigar after each meal-—and probably had flat feet from carrying all that heft around. » LJ » THE LIEUTENANT said he didn't think the army could use him. Here the thing got a little ticklish. I couldn't tell him that maybe Presjdent Truman might insist the larmy welcome my portly recruit, because he would have clammed up. So I said just guppose the army needed fat men. Then what? “We don't**need 'em,” he said, wand we don’t want ’em, but if I've got to suppose this gent with the bay window is going to be a soldier, we can fix him up with a suit. We keep a supplementary supply of odd sizes in uniforms and we can fit anybody up to 52 waist.”

» ” " THE SPOKESMAN of the supply department added that a little road work probably would reduce the embompoint (he used another

[Othman Considers John L.'s

a Buck Private

LABOR ‘DRAFT’ he obviously is going to have” his| ? Ce feet flattened out and the army!’ _—

is prepared for anything. { a a ON oe. SHOW Forces Merge to Defeat for him on an orthopedic last and President’s Bill. - he will get a year’s supply of shoes " ' / . as a starter.” i (Continued From Page One) ” n » THAT'S cheering news, because there's nothing worse in the infantry, I understand, than painful hoofs. The bad thing, shouid the presidential draft of labor leaders come to pass, has to do with Lewis’ liking for good Havana cigars. The average P. X. has ten centers for sale, but seldoin goes any higher. Even if John L. can compromise .on ropes like these, he can’t smoke ‘em when he’s drilling. j " ” ®

NEITHER can he lean back after luncheon and light up. The army won't allow smoking in its messes; this is because soldiers are supposed to eat in a hurry so the next fellow in line can get a seat. a There you are, Mr. Lewis. If you should want more information, I can argue my way through the

riod to strikes affecting the na-9 tional welfare,

Kept in Session

He kept the senate in session until 11:15 last night and threatened night sessions until the bill is passed. The senate, however, was to adjourn today out of respect to Senator Carter Glass (D. Va), who died at 1:15 a. m, This increased the possibility that the senate might take all week to act on the labor bill. And the so-called Case bill may be tacked on as an amendment unless Mr, Truman promises not to veto the Case measure if passed separately. 2 . Senator Robert A. Taft (R. O.) poised with a series of Republican amendments to the emergency bill, blocked Mr. Barkley's request at the end of last night's session to limit debate.

N word) of my friend and make a ps better man of him. I said was he| SSN forgetting the feet? { he “No indeed,” the lieutenant re-| plied. “When a man is that heavy

SPOTLIGHTS

Golde — Scobie — Sunray 'F. R. Hi-Spot — Academy

[I — Phoebe Flicker - Says: :

Baby Brownie Special Cameras.. $1.15

® | _ 142 NORTH FST

Ls

HAIR-DOS OF PERSONAL APPEAL

Croquignole Wave Cold Wave Shampoo & Hairdress Personal Supervision and Modern Equipment

INTERNATIONAL BEAUTY 34 & Tish

MA-7131

228 LT

PLASTIC OR LEATHEI

Pentagon again, but frankly. I dread it.

EVANSVILLE BANKER REFUSES ALL AID

(Continued From Page One)

Agree on Amendments

Mr. Taft and four other Republicans, acting officially for the G. O. P. senate steering committee, agreed last night on the series of amendments they will propose. The administration bill . would permit the President to set a deadline for resumption of work in a

Indiana city, Perry proceeded to|government-seized industry.

the federal building yesterday afternoon, asking employees for directions to Mr. Caughran’s office. There, he walked in, sat down in a highly nervous state before the district attorney, and related his story. . Perry said he had falsified war and victory bond purchases by the bank, He said he had placed a letter of confession, addressed to National City bank president Enlow in a desk drawer at the bank. Checking on Perry's admission, President Enlow verified the fund shortage. Perry, an employee of the bank for 36 years, had been advanced to the vice presidency last Jaunary,

MINE DISPUTE MAY BE ENDED TODAY

(Continued From Page One)

liberal welfare fund than the industry offered before the recent breakdown in negotiations. A reliable informant said the government indicatéd a willingness to indorse a $25,000,000 annual industry contribution to a welfare fund. The money would be raised by a

five-cent assessment on each ton of

coal mined.

“wedge. ‘Also in red of, Genuine leather sole.

| Merit Shoes

332 W. Wash.

1106 Shelby 930 S. Meridian 812 E. 63rd St.

FOR CLOTHES CARE

Although a tonnage “royalty” has been bitterly opposed by industry spokesmen, some operators were said to have expressed the belief that it was the only effective way to distribute the cost of the welfare

| | fund.

Mr. Lewis asked for a 10-cent royalty last year. But in negotiations this year he proposed a 7 per cent payroll assessment which

| would raise about $70,000,000 an- | nually.

Even with a government contract, Mr. Lewis still would need to win industry acceptance. He presumably would offer the same contract to the operators and wait

After that, company and union officials would be subject to fine and imprisonment for refusing to cooperate in resuming operations, and individuals failing to work would be subject to the draft and lose all seniority rights. It would let the President fix the wages and working conditions during the period of government operation. Net profits after payment of “just compensation” to plant | owners would go into the federal treasury.

Effects of Amendments

The amendments would: ONE: Eliminate the power to draft anyone. TWO: Limit the scope of the bill to public utilities, transportation facilities, and to the coal, oil and steel industries. THREE: Delete the Presidential power to fix wages. ; FOUR: Rewrite the part requiring company and union officials to take “appropriate affirmative action” to resume operations. FIVE: Deny a recalcitrant striker protection under the Wagner labor law but not affect his seniority rights if rehired after the end of government control. SIX: Let the U. 8. court of claim rule on what should be “just com-| pensation” to owners of seized prop-| erty for the period of government] operations.

HOPE FADES FOR ~ MARITIME PEACE

(Continued From Page One)

Republican

adequate increase in overtime rates and retroactive pay.” Other major - labor developments: The 25-day-old Los Angeles transit strike ended when streetcar | and bus operators voted nearly six to one to accept a compromise wage offer of a maximum of $1.23 per

Na v UNH a bib i Sh oF x J

-

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES _._____.

‘Lion of Virginia’ Served U. S. 46 Years; Life Spanned 4 Wars

(Continued From Page One) (court. He made a nation-wide radio gddress with “a soul filled with bitterness.” The Glass- Roosevelt breach reached a climax at the 1940 Democratic convention in Chicago. Mr. Glass opposed a third term .and nominated James A. Farley, also a| third-term foe, as President. But as the war continued, Mr. Glass not only vigorously supported the President's foreign policy but was in the forefront of the inter-| ventionist movement. During debate on the lend-lease! bill, he said: “I'm neutral. I don't] care who whips Hitler.” | One of his favorite pharses was| “I disembbweled them” when re-| fefring to what he had done to his opponents during a legislative battle. On one occasion, when debate in| the senate was impending, one of Mr. Glass colleagues urged him-—

the capital and ‘most “of "his colleagues by taking his second wife, a widow some 20 years his junior She was from Amherst, Va. Also surviving is a son by a previous marriage, Carter Jr., who served in tH® army during the war. Another son, Powell, died last year in Lynchburg, Va. . Mr. Glass, while unable to atten senate sessions, made his influence felt by exercising proxy votes in committees, through his secretary, Rixey Smith. He had declined to see strangers during the last few years, although he received intimate friends on special occasions like his birthday.

Mr. Glass bought the Lynchburg News in 1888 with $13,000 he borrowed. Five years later, he acquired the Lynchburg Virginian and the Ads

4 Ly Ait nie ow v . a 4]

“N\0 28, 1%4¢

Cw

fi

7% HH. LIEBER (5 24 WEST WASHINGTON ST.

* ONE OF THE LARGEST PHOTO SUPPLY HOUSES IN THE MIDDLE WEST ;

CITE : 2 New Arrivals for Your Vacation

Kodak Baby Brownie Special . Kodak Brownie Synchro Model Reflex

0)

WATCH FOR OUR BRANCH STORE OPENINGS

vance, merging the three papers |“Give 'em Hell, Carter!” into two enterprises publishing | 2

morning and evening newspapers. |powder will serve as well?” Mr.'3 5 be Y,

Publisher Until Death [Glass retorted. He remained publisher until his

death, despite his vigorous mone STRIKE PARALY E S career which began in 1899 when | x he was elected. to the Virginia state | D legislature. Mr, Glass liked to refer to himself as “a relic of constitutional government.” He was scarcely a modernist in other respects, either. About 16 years ago, he fought against installation of dial telephones—"“an infernal nuisance”—in the senate office building. He contended airmail “was a foolish fad.” Mr. Glass never lost his Virginia drawl despite his long years of service in cosmopolitan Washington. | tended. He was born in Lynchburg, Va. on| The dispute flared May 15 when | Jan. 4 1858—before the civil war| Mr. Cartwright abolished 489 de-|% began. . { partment of public works jobs to¢ ‘Shoot Yankees’ | prevent unionization of employees. | Later 61 ash truck drivers were

(Continued From Page One)

drug supplies and companies handling out-of-town newspapers will |$ be permitted to operate, Principal issue in dispute was a provision of the New York state constitution which permits employees to organize, but- which City Manager Louis B. Cartwright re- | fused to recognize, the unions con- Bb

“Why use dynamite when insect o

CITY OF 325,000}

disputes.

When he was only seven years| old, the freckle-faced Mr. Glass re-| fused to give way to a troop of union cavalry thundering down a road near his birthplace. A union officer, amused by the display of ‘rebel” tenacity, asked Mr. Glass what ¥e'd like to b& when he grew up. “A major, like my father, and shoot Yankees,” the boy retorted. In recent years, Mr. Glass forgot about the ‘Yankees,” but _often expressed a desire privately to “shoot” some of “those dad bum New Dealers. ‘Unreconstructed Rebels’

‘It was President Roosevelt who called him the *“unreconstructed rebel.”- There was an element of mutual regard between the late President and the Virginia senator despite their frequent, vehement

Mr. Glass, retaining the temper | of his red-haired youth, broke with the Roosevelt administration in the early days of the New Deal and chose to renfain outside the fold most of the time. In 1939, he re-' turned to support the President's! neutrality program, . In 1936, he told the President: Termed™ Program ‘Degrading’ “Since I must vote for a New Dealer, I prefer to vote for a first- | rate. one rather than one who is| distinctly second-rate, That means | I will vote for you.” { After supporting Mr. Roosevelt in| 1932, Mr. Glass was offered the post | of treasury secretary, the senator | declined. He termed the President’s fiscal program in 1933 as ‘“degrading” compared with the system he| had built up in the Wilson administration. Mr. Glass’ antipathy toward the

: i | dismissed for refusing to man ve- 2

hicles. : " FUR STORAGE ONL 2) CALL- | RI. 7722

ETL

HOOSIER FUR CO. RI. 7722157 N. Illinois St.

Ask Your

3 1X

Physician Bose os

“BABY TALK" A Mother's Magazine REE FOR THE ASKING ’ CALL CH. 2128

DIAPER LAUNDRY—2 Deliveries Weekly

for them to accept singly or in groups. Because of the threat of strikes, the government would retain con-

hour. The government closed the books on the rail crisis by returning the Illinois Central railroad to private |

Biv BER] New ‘Deal .reached a second peak |

in 1937 when the President pro- SERVICE INC.

posed to reorganize the supreme CH, 2125 "Ask Your Physician"

trol of the mines until agreements

Hoon? RESTORES APPEARANCE—INCREASES WEAR CONVENIENT LOCATIONS

Cash and Carry 3909 E. 10th St. 1115 College ave. 2409 E. 38th st. 2754 Roosevelt 3212 E. Michigan ave. st. 1028 Oliver ave. FOR PICKUP AND DELIVERY

North and East—CH-$380. Brightwood—CH-3861

o nque AZUL

FAST =

Daily Bus Service to . . .

MADISON and CINCINNATI 4 Trips Daily

The Ohio River at Clifty Falls State Park, Madison, Ind. '

VACATION . . . RELAX

at Clifty Falls State Park, Madison, Ind. Riding . . . Boating . . . Tennis . . . Hiking . . . Every facility for a restful and

interesting vacation,

ownership and lifting emergency restrictions on highway and Water

! T | transportation, PETITION OF SOCIAL {| Resumption of a strike on the

were signed by the owners.

CLUB IS REFUSED Hudson and Manhattan ratlroad, 4. (Which carries more than 100,000] commuters daily between New Jersey and New York City, was threatened. { The company said it would not | abide by the 18':-cent hourly wage | increase granted Saturday in settie-| ment of the nation-wide railroad | strike,

Judge Walter Pritchard of s perior court 4 today refused to issue a temporary injunction on a petition brought by the Businessmen's Social club, 856 S. Meridian st., against the police department and city officials. The suit charged that an injunction against the police department : was necessary because police offi- March on Capital cers threatened to raid the club and| At Vancouver, B. C, Internaarrest officials of the organization. tional Woodworkers of America (C. “Under the evidence presented I 0.) officials ordered thousands of with the petition, I saw no reason | Striking loggers and sawmill workto issue an injunction in the case,”|ers to march on the provincial cap- { Judge Pritchard said.

etme the cabinet move to settle a union wage-hour dispute.

LOCAL BURGLARIES The Los Angeles transit strike; ADMITTED BY COUPLE which put an estimated 1,000,000

Washington, Pa., police reported | daily riders on their feet last May today that a man named Donald | 3. ended when streetcar and bus McGregor and a woman companion, | OPerators agreed to a top scale of

Zola Gay Peak, 2523 N. Gladstone $1.23 an hour instead of their origave, admited to burglaries in In-|inal demand of $1.36. They received

dianapolis, Denver, Colo.; Cincin-|® top minimum of $1.03 before the

nati, O., and Louisville, Ky. strike. : ; Watches, pearls, a top coat and U. 8. Operation Ends rings valued at $3100, were found| Return of the Illinois Central on McGregor, Washington police|railroad to private management reported to city police today. Mc- marked the ‘end of nine months of Gregor and his companion was government operation. nabbed running a red light in the! The line was seized last Aug. 23. Pennsylvania city. (It was the first of 338 carriers the | government took over inan attempt to head off last week's crippling strike. The I. C. was the only major line not affected by the walkout—and the last to be returned to private ownership.

Advertisement

DOES GAS COME

"| With Stomach Acid Pain?

11 stomach acid causes gas that ‘bloat® you and Makes You feel miserable, the very first trial of UDGA Tablets usually brings fast relief, UDGA is not a candy but a real medicine, based on a truly successful prescription. UDGA is compx fast working ingredients, which neutralize and soothe stomach acid pains. That's why over 200 mitlion have been used for relief of gas, stomach and ulcer pains, indigention, oaths, aout a past slouch, burnng weak a; and other symptone OF ravoah aad. ot 38s Dox of UDGA i . In only five you may er

need in, Satisfaction or Y BACK. ~

BOY SHOT BY PLAYMATE

FT. WAYNE, Ind, May 28 (U. P.) .~Sheriff Walter C. Adams today termed accidental the death of a 13-year-old boy who was killed last night when a defective .22caliber bullet exploded in the hands of a playmate.

acid stomach DOUBLE YOUR MON

The PEOPLE’S DENTIST

Office Hours: 8 A. M. to 5 P. M. Every Day Except Sunday

LI-3985

ital at Victoria, B. C., to demand

PREPIRE FOR VAGATION!

JL . «

After only one hour at Arthur Murray's you can go out dance ing! And after a few more hours you'll be really good... That's because of Arthur Murray’s unique method and the

ENROLL Today, . DANCE Tonight! skill of his talented teachers. { Start lessons now and get the

| thrill of your life on your vaca | tion when you find you're so | popular — the center of the merriest whirl! Studios are | open until 10 p. m, Come today

! —or phone FR. 2565, | ARTHUR MURRAY

38'2 North Pennsylvania

In the. hands of an Arthur Murray expert , , . you'll learn the real Rhumba, or any dance, quickly — and have happy confidence in your dancing ever after.

| { | | | | | i | |

|

| "The wishes of the family always govern us. Every faculty of modern science is available in our establishment. When yor needs calls us to service, we- place ourselves, our experience and our skill at your disposal. Ambulance Service Day and Night &

PEAKS and INN 9 B=

FUNERAL HOME

Relax in cool icy summer suitables, and retain that air of well-dressed smartness. :

Chambrays *5° Sheers *8%

Bembergs *8* O up A large variety of cottons, ginghams, crepes and rayons await © you. . Sizes 9-to Wa OPEN (0 A. M. TO 6 P. M.—FRIDAYS TILL 9 P. M. USE OUR LAYAWAY

In ’

Look Your Best on a Budget’

duds Eddi

SOSH a a

Listen to the Races!

with Bi ” LER RADIO

Similar te Cut

WITH TONE CONTROL LIBERAL TERMS

$3495.

Similar to eut

RAVES RECORD PLAYER

‘PLAYS TEN 12 OR (0-INCH RECORDS

®* Three-tube amplifier -® Large P.M. Speaker * Tone Control * Volume control * Record ejector

2 : LIBERAL TERMS

HIHILE

FURNITURE [OMPRAY

Open Mon, Fri, Sat, Until § P.M,

$44.5}

ing. . She dec because the si situation, Mrs. from “the - Hu every floor, tr still couldn't 1 and took the from Mrs. Mar floor, Mrs. H

Charles V museum Indi

y .: Civi WRIGHT ]

sdons end the nto 8 New Yo side.

Radar for coming, but t kave:develope to be.used cor Army flier to guide ther give them an ahead of thei too big and t sider ‘these fij Ak the sta

foob unit, wei,

Mechanice BRIG. GE tronic subdivis technically kr simplest and | by the army : contr you ii

tionag instrum Baually ir predicting we:

Avis

I'VE DON] moted: atomic the grade, I elegtrifying d tion of Germs completely de nation withou the other Ge airpower com; fighters. Berlin is ¢ Berlin it fran to build a nev Bombs—thous by an air forc ing air force f systematic lev lenge to all t] w=killed by or What couls that the ordi tion to ask about the at Japan that w badly as Hiro before the fir,

Situation THE ONL be able to dc bs, That’ atomic bomb be ‘used mor robomb. | + Our bomb in the face ©

My

NEW YOF the railroad and appraise these dramati The Presid hh agains ment, neverth lic.as a whole and seriously,

jot /and cor t it over, ak w

However, t President to t congress, in t In timé of wa ment and in wherever the) use of this with men's f work.

| Governme YOU CAN refuse to wor) [| not be able to | lose privileges | do net think f h srelsingh thelr XR pthat, in

| ment will be

AER

fo

i ony