Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 16 September 1946 — Page 5
| MONDAY, SEPT. 16, 1946 . Ee ThE mANATOUS TIMES TL i ; PAGE § — a Reds’ Blustering in Paris | Lady. Helps Get Times to Homes WALLACE ISPAT [Connally Warns Yugoslavia, THIEF STEALS we LI] Covers Weakness at Home [= ~ ONRUSS POLICY 'taly to Obey Trieste Ruling AR-AND BOYS
NY
Friday
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survived by his parents, Mr. and RETAILERS ASK COMMITTEE Mrs, James Foddrill, Hobbyville;-a| - WASHINGTON, Sept. 16 (U, P.).! 3 i brother, Dale Foddrill, Kalamazoo,| —The commerce department an-
LAMPS
a
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fatigue after the long, heroic effort |
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| { | {
roof, the Soviet union has shown
; rE | ! and the shortage of aystrial | : : that its policy rested on high Cl the harvest is believed to be fair, : : +. must .pot be a satellite of Yugo- 1 Th { h : ' technicians. t principles. e Soviet union has But the point is that the reserves The most striking me ofl Finds It Interasling Parties Jia or Italy. The free territory given its ‘support to - our claims Two Children, Auto Found
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are low and the harvest is reported to be insufficient to build up the essential supplies. Moscow Needs Reserves
Those reserves are required by @ for two purposes: One is for relief next spring in the satellité countries after UNRRA withdraws: food is essential asa Soviet political weapon in her sphere of influence. - Second, for storage to build up a ~ War reserve,
This shortage of food reserves js said to explain in part Moscow's policy of keeping large occupation armies In other countries where they can live off the land. ' More Red troops are stationed in Eastern Germany and Austria than is required for immediate military purposes. Their training, reorganization and reindoctrination, so im-
: i ) ; cx revived today in the Bulgarian polit- |inn. portant $e Mose bw, woud be car- ok lve n he Bussian sooncmy “- a aligeey Wari ae Doubts Intentions ical a oy ice The boys, Christopher, 9, and Buover RY od Wea. More Hundreds of thousands of German | statement “made the .point that Mr. Kardel) expressed serious first time since it broke up in a|gene, 5, sons of Mr. and Mrs. Carl
such excessive numbers is a political Mability to the German and
Austrian Communist parties which {
are trying to win over the natives. But Russian home conditions be- | ing what ‘they are, the Kremlin | cannot afford to feed those Red | armies so long as they can find they can find their own food abroad. Industrial Recovery Slow
Slow industrial recovery is officially admitted by Moscow. Since Jupe the ministry for state control
plan announced by Stalin last February to triple prewar production has been running up against addi-
this is the virtual collapse, for the time being at least, of the original Kremlin plan to rehabilitate and
{industrialize the country by moving
German, Austrian and other conquered plants bodily to Russia. Today much of .that machinery is lying scattered and rusting because | of inability of the Russians to s- | semble and use it. This failure, plus the time factor in the present war danger, has forced Stalin to reverse his plan. | He is now leaving the factories in Germany and Austria and running them full blast with native tech-| nicians and labor to produce ar-| maments and all types of goods for the Red army. Transportation Weak ; The tr#nsportation situation is the worst of all. Traditionally a!
prisoners are still held in Russia to repair rail lines, build bridges and highways. | Locomotives and railway equipment generally are problems. For example on the Moscow-Leningrad | main line the trip now takes from twice to three times the prewar schedule.
It is not suggested here that Lliese many evidences of Russia's economic troubles will prevent her eventual recovery and growth as a leading industrial power. But for
kind of war apparently threatened by the Soviet and its satellites.
(Tomorrow—Political factors
Charles Smith has 30 customers on his Times route but they are
USED) WHEAT WASHINGTON — In =
in Germans used wheat and 1
STRAW
AYRES’ IS OPEN TOMORROW AT 9 A, M.!
NAITRESS HUNTED
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.orgue to the Shirley Bros. funeral! ime, thence to the Jenkins funeral ome at Bloomfield, Ind. Three men who
uestioning, yesterday, but
in this direction. In High Spirit Last person known to have seen . Foddrill alive was his roommate |
{result of the incident. Rep. John é lay Jones, 22. Mr. Jones told police! J. Sparkman (D. Ala.),. chairman 5 his friend had left the house iniof the speakers’ bureau, took the AYRES’ 1S OPEN TOMORROW AT high spirits in anticipation of a!pnsitiom that Mr. Wallace was . ns
blind date” he said had been ar-
ranged for him by a man named |
*Carl.” Detectives identified “Carl” as Carl Cline, 23, of 542 Marion ave Mr. Cline said Foddrill had been expected at his home that night. but emphatically denied promised to get him a “blind date.” Down Payment of $380 Mr. Cline handed Mr. Foddrill $380 as down payment on the latler's “car Saturday morning the office of a downtown fim, Mr.
{mained home Saturday night after| Foddrill said he intended to|DOW & cabinet member could speak
| visit them to “seal the deal” between |S & private citizen nor ahether
{ Mr.
9 and 10 p. m. The body was discovered by Frank Deter, 31, of 1341 W. Ray st., who had driven down the underpass road on his way home from Mac's lunchroom on Kentucky ave. at Morris -st. Mr. Deter raced back to the restaurant and reported he had seen either “a dead man or a drunk” under the bridge. Half a dozen patrons accompanied him back to the death site. One of them, Ed Gaither, telephoned police after inspecting the grisly scene at cioser range. Described by his landlady, Dan Sinex, as a “model roomer,” | the slain man had worked for the | Janes Automatic Music Co. 803 N. | Delaware st. | A native of Hobbyville, Ind., he is
| Mich., and: five sisters, Mrs. Violette Garnett, Indianapolis; Boruff, Oolitic; and Mrs. Elizabeth Workman, Salsbury Route, Ind, and Mrs. Wanda
live near the | nurder scene were picked up for | police | vere reported, making no headway |
having |
indent and secretary of state say it loan |is one thing. then that's what it is Cline and his wife re-|50 far as I am concerned.”
Mrs. |
Mrs. Lucille Mrs. Lorene Moore |
of Trieste must not be merely a paper state.” “We must not create another | Danzig,” he said, “The free territory before the speech—that. he ap- of Trieste must in fact be free— |proved of all of it and that he be- from from Yugoslavia and free from [lieved it was in line with Secretary | Italy." | Byrnes’ policy. South Africa. submitted 11 pgp- | But members of the U. 8. delega- osed amendments to the Italian
-Disagree With Him.
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; {tion to the Paris peace conference draft treaty ‘which were generally
|charged sthat the. speech cut the in line with changes Italy had re{ground from under Secretary quested. One would permit Italy {Byrnes and his policy of firmness to maintain defensive fortifications {toward Russia. They described Mr. (and armaments on the Yugoslav {Truman's apparent endorsement of |{rontier, another would boost the
| Wallace's views as a colossal blun- | | Ttalian fleet by 25 per cent andy
der, * la third would make the Italian Natural Misunderstanding treaty open to revision within two
p r soon as ‘Italy joins the Saturday, Mr. Truman issiied al Years oe 23 3 vi : nited Nations. statement repudiating Mr. al- | \ h t f y al | The - proposals ace's speech as a statement o |meet sharp attack by foreign policy.
were certain to Russia and Yugoslavia, d
without asking &nything in return or laying down any conditions,” he said. Small Nations’ Day “The time has come when small nations shall not any more be divided into ‘spheres of ' interests, shall not be objects of exploitation, Somebody's bases or voting machines at international conferences. The time has come to understand that small nations really wish. to be free and independent.” The Soviet bloc and the western powers were engaged in a frank ideological battle over Trieste. Their arguments. this week will bear heayily upon the ultimate results of the conference. Another heated issue was to be
Mr. Wallace had a right to speak ‘doubt that Britain and the United | his mind.” States were sincere in the reasons Furthermore, it was pointed out|ihey gave for keeping Trieste out that the Democratic national com-|of Yugoslav hands. mittee kept Mr. Wallace in top| He denounced both great western position on its campaign speakersipowers for indulging in “old style list. |international relations.” Like V. M. He is booked for a swing into up- Molotov, Soviet foreign minister ward of a dozen states where left Saturday, he rejected the idea of wing organizations more often than | ¢oheres of influence. not will be prominent among his| The American delegation chose Sponsors. the crucial Trieste dispute to show Meanwhile, Acting Secretary of Secretary of State James F. Byrnes’ State William L. Clayton conferred frm attitude toward Russia. still
| policy matters given its active apd firm backing Mr. Truman is being charged i, yugoslav claims to Trieste. {here with a serious political blun- By helping a smaller people to] | der in permitting the incident to'achieve their final unity under one]
{tests at the AAF's Muroec, Cal,
near riot Friday. At that time Kuzma V. Kisseley {of Byelo-Russia, the commission chairman, and other Soviet bloc members, walked out and the other members held a rump protest session against Mr. Kisselev, The dispute, still unresolved, was whether or not to hear Greek claims for Bulgarian territory,
|
(ARMY SET TO SEEK RECORD
WASHINGTON, Sept. 16 (U, P). ~The XP-84, the army air forces
the present and near future Rus- scattered around on S. Emerson, Southeastern ave. and E. Raymond | Mr. T in what the new experimental jet fighter plane has been pur iat . , ! . 2 y with r. Truman in stands. 'W experime 8 p ; - A managers Py ao sia's economic base is too shaky.| st. So when he is in a hurry he calls on “Lady,” his horse, to help White House termed a routine Mr. Kardelj praised Russia as a|ls being groomed for an attack CZECHS HANG TRAITOR & khem. with inefficiency and. cor according to many international ex-' out. Charles is 11, the son of Mrs. Leona Smith, 5251 E. Raymond st. meeting.’ It was presumed, how-| generous friend of small nations, [on the world*speed record of 616 PRAGUE, Sept. 18 (U, P.).—Ree ruption. ‘The : current. five-year perts gathered here, to sustain the He is in the sixth grade at Lowell school. . ever, that’ they discussed foreign| «yt is true the Soviet union has|miles an hour, AAP sources revealed tired Czech Gen. Frantisek Bartos,
today. The new ship is undergoing base and already has traveled 611 miles
After ‘9 Hours.
VINELAND, N. J, Sept. 16 (U, P.)~Two children], left to sleep in the rear seat of an automobile’ while their’ parents stopped in a tavern, were found unharmed - day when police discovered the car bogged down in a andy 1 ‘road nine hours after it was stolen from in front of the night club their parents were visiting. The car was found at nearby Broatmanville by Landis Township Police Capt. Carl Ford and Sgt, Glenn Hosteder, who. with nearly 50 civilians and state police had searched all night for the children, In the car was Alexander Noe vasky, 28, Broatmanville, who poe lice said admitted taking the mae. chine from in front of the Villa
Smith, Atlantic City, WN. not harmed. According to police, Novasky said he did not know the boys were asleep in the car when he took it. After he had gone but a short distance, Novasky told police, he noticed the children and became panic-stricken, Fearful he would be discovered, he drove around through the surrounding woodlands during the night until the car’ stalled in the sandy road, police said.
J, were
66, was hanged today for treason just two hours after the death sentence was ordered by the nae
President had failed to repudiate the Wallace statement of foreign | policy. With Mr. Byrnes’ resignation would have collapsed the ef- v fective but still limited RepublicanDemocratic collaboration in foreign policy. The United Press was informed | by a Democratic national commit- | tee spokesman yesterday that there {would be no change in plans for [| Mr. Wallace's speaking program as
privileged to express any views he might personally hold.
win Speak in Indiana *
| Reached in Boston, Mr. man told the United Press: { “I believe Mr. Wallace—as a private citizen—has a right to express an opinion as to what our. { foreign policy should be. But 1 don't think he is in a position to {decide that policy. If the Presi-
Spark-
Mr. Sparkman did net explain
the speeches with which Mr, Wallace will seek votes in this cam- | paign are to be interpreted as representing his ideas of what should | be done or what the administration will undertake to do. In addition to the Rhode Island engagement, Mr. Sparkman has arranged for Mr, Wallace to speak! during October in New York, Penn- | sylvania, Connecticut, New Jer-| sey, Ohio, Indiana, Wisconsin, Minnesota, Kansas, Iowa and Washington. { The schedule was .subject to expansion when it last was under discussion. On Nov. 3 Wallace is | due in Chile to represent Mr, Truman at the inauguration of Presi-dent-elect Gabriel Gonzalez Videal
nounced today that retailers a}tending a conference last week on industry problems had recommend(ed creation of a permanent advisory committee on retailing to work
J tional troubles other than national | the Soviet war threat). as sources of rayon cellulo an hour. tional court.’ a. HEI NE IN BRIDGE SLAYIN occur at. all. Persons weil me- 2 nm Bhi nad in SE RA totais MTR on quainted’ with Mr. Byrnes believe {he would have resigned if the §
LS. Ayes & (os.
9 A; M.! SHOP TUESDAY THRU: SATURDAY — CLOSED MONDAYS!
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