Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 20 August 1946 — Page 3
TUESDAY, AUG. 2, 19
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46
“THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Italy Disputes ‘War Guilt’ Clause Of Draft
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BEGS PARLEY T0 RECOGNIZE
AID TO ALLIES
Not ‘Strong Enough, Yugoslavs Reply. ‘Get to Work’ Says Vishinsky.
PARIS, Aug. 20 (U, P.).—Italy appealed to the peace conference today to credit the Italian people rather than the allied armies with overthrowing Benito Mussolini's fascism and with 18 months of cobelligerence on the side of the allies, The Italian political commission received a note from the Rome gov. ernment pleading that the preamble of the Italian draft treaty be rewritten, It sought new wording to
ease the onus of Italy's fascism and ® month Japan fill export the first |
collapse late in the war,
Designed to take the blame for gtates since the occupation started it was announced today.
_ Fascist Italy's deeds off the present] government, the plea was for inclusion of a statement that Italy
was “led by a Fascist regime” to » become a party to the tripartite axis ‘pact. J
Dislike Surrender Wording The draft treaty said that Italy under a Jascist regime became a party to the tripartite pact with
a war of aggression and entered into war with the allies. The Italians also sought the elimination of the preamble reference to the fact that Italy “surrendered unconditionally.” They wanted to substitute a phrase that “aly was the first to break with the Tripartite pact powers, accepting the terms of an armistice.” They also complained that the - preamble dismissed “too curiously” Itély's co-belligerence and contribution to the allies in the last monthg of the war. Yuggslavia- promptly sprang to the io A spokesman argued to the commission that the wording of the Italian treaty should be “aggravated, not alleviated.” As the preamble stands, the Yugoslavs pointed out, it makes no mention of Italy's other aggressions in Ethiopia, Albania, Spain and elsewhere, ‘Get to Work,’ Russians Ask The debate on the Italian preamble began after Andrei Vishinsky, deputy foreign minister of Russia, urged the delegates to get down to work and quit talking ahout procedure.
JAPAN READIES SILK |
Germany and Japan and deciared|
Local Youth Scores Chicago Triamph
Winner in Indianapolis and Chicago . . . Delbert Dale, 14-year-old Indianapolis cornetist and winner in the park board's summer festival, who scored another triumph in Chicago Saturday night. Delbert won first place in cornet at the 17th annual Chicagoland Music festival. Son of Mr. and Mrs. N. A. Dale, R. R. 6, Box 331 R, and pupil of Alonzo Edison, he will be a sophomore at Technical high school this fall.
INDIANA OPA SEEKS $9681 IN DAMAGES
used automobiles at over-celling! prices, the Indiana district OPA today sought damages amounting to $9681 from four alleged violators in
tice.
filed in the circuit courts of Vigo, Bartholomew, Clay and Ripley counties. Another suit has been filed In federal court here against an Eyansville dealer, asking suspension of’ his license to do business. Defendants in the damage suits are Edward J. Tiffin, Terrg Haute; {Fred Miller, Columbus; Willia | Gibson, Brazil, and Lionel Boswell,
"| Butlerville, The shipment will consist of 5,
The federal court defendant fis
{000,000 yards of assorted habutae— | Gall Burris, who is charged with
SHIPMENTS T0 U. S. a soft, light-weight fabrie—in 36- (having made
18,000,000 price sales since May, 1045, when he
TOKYO, Aug. 10 (U. P.) ~Within inch widths. Another
end of the year,
STRAUSS SAYS:
wey every
which, fhe" SoVié: Argued |
was pressing for ‘action, saying that | there had been enough talk. “Nobody knows what will happen |
in the next quarter of an hour,” he said. “God himself doesn’t know, and we can't possibly know sufficiently to try to fix our procedure that precisely in advance. We must not continue this interminable argument over procedure. I think we ought to start our work.” ‘More Decisions, Fewer Words’
“The Soviet delegation is in favor of more decisions and fewer words,” M. Vishinsky said. “We are not in favor of more general discussions. We Have had enough general dis¢ussions and think we should now get down to work.” The Romanian- political commission met for less than an hour, then adjourned without discussing the treaty draft. Plans to hear Albania and Cuba state their views in a plenary session today were canceled last night hecause the Albanian delegation had not arrived.
ARTIFICIAL EYE OF HOOSIER EXPLODES
NOBLESVILLE, Ind, Aug. 20 (U. Pp) —City Park Manager Harvey Hiatt rested comfortably today, recovering from the effects of his seeond eye explosion in the past year. Mr. Hiatt said his left. eye suddenly “blew up” as he sat on a park bench Sunday night. He blamed it on the excessive heat. Mr. Hiatt suffered face lacerations from the flying glass. Dr. Carl B. Southard, his physician, sald there was a small hole in the tissue behind Mr. Hiatt’s eye which created a vacuum and apparently caused both explosions, one last summer, Mr, Hiatt lost his eye in an auto-
mobile accident several years age.
COLORADO'S SENATOR JOHNSON WON'T RUN
DENVER, Aug. 20 (U, P).-U. 8 Senator Ed C. Johnson, who came to Colorado to die in 1909 and stayed to become its senator, told reporters today he would refuse to pe a candidate for any office in 1948. However, he said he would take to the stump in the state campaign this fall to elect Democratic candi- © dates. Born In Scandia, Kas, Johnson migrated to Colorado in 1908 as a victim of tuberculosis. Never beaten in a race for public office, he served four terms in the state house of representatives, one two-year term as lieutenant governor, two terms as governor, and is ending his seecond term as United States senator.
4-H BOYS AND GIRLS QUALIFY FOR FAIR
Times Special’ CRAWFORDSVILLE, Ind. Aug. } 20. At least 85 Montgomery county | boys and girls, all winners in the recent 4-H fair here, will have entries in the state fair.at Indian. apolis. Twenty-eight girls have qualified in the various home economics exhibits, while 57 boys will have livestock entries. . County Agricultural Agent Gordon
eT
ehlioy, three weeks of,’ dco
Bowers will be in direct charge of
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yards of silk usable as lining ma- | received a warning notice {terial is being prepared for export. | government agency, (silk cloth shipped to the United | s jied headquarters said all of the] Mr. Tiffin is alleged to have over- | lining silk would be shipped by the charged purchasers a total of $3233
NOW THEY COME THE AIR THEY BREATHE
seven over-celling
from the
|in eight sales. Mr. Miller, in seven
radition with a
("wha
Admitting the widespread sale of | $1554. {asked represent three times
an effort to halt the growing prac-|
Suits against the four have been!
YOUNG MEN
| | sales; is charged with overcharges |
jiotaling $4554. Damages sought against Mr. Gibson amount to $738, while Mr. Boset has been sued for a total of In all cases, the damages the amount of the alleged Svercintges
FT. WAYNE TO GET VETERANS HOSPITAL
WASHINGTON, Aug. 20 (U, P.). —Army engineers today announced plans for new streamlined hospitals they propose to build for the vet. erans administration. One of them will be at F't. Wayne, Ind. The hospitals will include structural glass operating rooms, pneumatic communications systems, cen-
{tral oxygen supplies piped to rooms, {a miniature department store, and
a radio for each patient, Each hospital will be equipped with medical theaters, conference rooms and libraries designed to give the staff an opportunity to keep abreast of new developments in medical science. Research { acilities also will be provided.
BOYS OF ALL AGES SPACIOUS HOME... IN ON THE FOURTH FLOOR
LITTLE FELLOWS who are about to toddle GRADE SCHOOLERS from siz—to in their teens— OF THE HIGH-SCHOOL AGES— from Freshmen to erudite Seniors—
t do YOU think").
NAZARENE CHURCH OFFICIAL TO SPEAK
Dr, J. B. Chapman of Kansas City, highest ranking official of the Church of the Nazarene, will address a mass meeting sponsored by the Nazarene district at 7:30 o'clock tonight in the Roberts Park Methodist church, The mass meeting will precede the annual district assembly of the Church of the Nazarene opening tomorrow at 9 a. m. at Roberts Park. Dr. Chapman is an author, world traveler and lecturer. Delegates last night responded to an appeal for overseas relief and rehabilitation with offerings of more than $5000 which was $2000 in excess of what the district had hoped to raise. Highlights of the convention include Dr, Chapman's sermon to ministers and delegates tomorrow morning, the appointment and ordi-
nation of ministers, reports given by pastors of the work of the local] The
churches and special music. district includes the 130 Nazarene churches in southern Indiana meeting will close Friday noon,
lof year
By Science Service WASHINGTON, Aug. 20.—Min-| nesota's fatal week-end tornado was an unfortunate by-product of something for which everybody hopes in mid-August—the arrival of cooler weather, giving a break in the heat. Early on Saturday, U. 8. weather bureau records show, a cold air mass started moving over the midwest from Canada; maximum temperature figures spotted in on the map show from 15 to 20 degrees between the area behind the cold front and the regions in front of it. This 1s a typical setup for tornadoes. When cold air moves in over warm, the warm air, being lighter, tends to rise, “and the greater the temperature difference the stronger is the convectional, for “boiling” action. If the rising air gets started to whirling, a tornado may result.’ The week-end tornado occurred
in the part of the country where
The |it might be expected at this time but he got the general right.
Tornado season begins in'
fo THEY MUI es MEUP HERE]
‘want to be seen AND hoard! JUST BECAUSE a boy is 2%
Minnesota's ‘Twister' Not Unusual for this Time of Year
the gulf states In early spring or even late winter, and the area &f greatest tornado frequency moves up the map as warm weather ade vances. A tornado in Minnesota in August need occasion no partious lar surprise. One in Georgia at present would be considered “out of season.”
It was in the gulf region that the name tornado originated. Early Spanish settlers, encountering this violent, twisting type of weather disturbance, gave it the name which in. Spanish means “twister” It was in the gulf region, too, that the English-speaking world first made the acquaintance of the tornado. Oliver Goldsmith, describe ing In his. “deserted village” the terrors to which Oglethorpe's poor debtor colonists were exposed in Georgia, gives a lurid pleture: “While oft in whirls the mad tornado flies “Mingling the ravaged landscape with the skies.” Goldsmith never saw a
roi
10 years old—he's a man, isn't he—Hoe's old enough to get Ms elothes at Strauss, isn't he?
IN A TREMENDOUS UPSWEEP ... AS NATURALLY AS 10 THEIR NEW, MORE
IN THE MAN'S STORE!
off to kindergarten
In they come in record numbers-following instinct and custom and good sense—right to their store—the Man's Store
It's the same old store they've known so well—only more of it! More room to get around in—yet still keeping the old, home-like flavor.
More clothes and accessories—to see and to enjoy—but never room for anything blah—or stale—or weird.
And always—forever and a day—a masculine type of store that understands a boy's heart—and his head—and his framework!
And even though the Architects and the Fixture people still have their work to do—it's nevertheless in great shape to serve you in great style! Reet!
And always "the BEST at the Price—no matter what the Price."
1
Shaws 8% ro
Offigial Outten for Senior Scouts, Sea Souk, Sub Scouts and Explorer Scouts— Fourth Floor
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