Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 24 September 1946 — Page 12

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GO ON A VISIT to 4700 Rookwood ave. a neighborhood that gets its shade from, the walls of Butler university, and what do you hear? Talk about Purdue

university, that’s what. , . . Right within the shadow

of B. U, we heard a group of grade school boys dis-

cussing Purdue as they pitched horseshoes. A Butler !

coed didn’t even lower her voice as she spoke wistfully, of the Purdue's wonders—one boyfriend in particular. Why we even heard that one family in the block has two sons in Purdue. Rank treason, we'd say. . . .

We found at least four Butler enthusiasts in the i Pow and they were enthusiastic enthusiasts, The

4 ‘our, Ginny Trostel, seven; Debby Horton, six, Carolyn

Hinesley, five, and Bonnie Cassada, six, had an oat-

meal box drum, a cowbell, a tin candy box and a | ~paper horn. The object—a big parade in honor of a

morning scrimmage session over in the bowl, . . . Even more football conscious are the boys in that neigh« borhood. They learn their toddling steps climbing up and down the bleachers in the Butler bowl, and are firmly convinced Little Red Riding Hood was Red Grange’s kid sister,

Dolls Hobby of Two Women

TWO WOMEN who live only a few doors from each other have similar hobbies, but they didn't plan it that way. Mrs. Roy Price, of 4711, and Mrs. John Horton, of 4721, didn't know each other before they moved to Rookwood, and had lived there sometime before they found that, both were interested in dolls as a hobby. Mrs. Price makes chubby comic dolls, by stuffing and decorating men’s work socks. Mrs. Horton’s hobby is making doll hats, miniatures of the ones you see in millinery stores. . .. We learned about the two doll hobbies from two Butlerites (there are some in those parts), Jody Trostel and Charline Hayes, both- of 4725. Both girls have graduated from the doll-admiration to the football hero-admiration stages, but they get a kick out of their neighbors’ hobbies. , . . Mrs, Price started making dolls several years ago, when she saw a similar doll in a store, priced at $3.50. “Why not get it down to earth where common people could play with it?” Mrs. Price wondered. She got the art of making them down pat and forthwith got it “down to earth.” Her six-year-old son, Jay, is “grown up now” and pretends a great contempt for the “dolls.” Therefore he'd be greatly abashed if he knew his mother had let out his secret. He sleeps with one of the sock dolls.

Y Dahlias by the Score

SPEAKING OF HOBBIES, it doesn't take more than one glance at 4658 to determine the hobby there. There are dahlias in the side yard, dahlias in the backyard, dahlias in a lot across the street and more dahlias in a greenhouse in the garage. Not just dahlias, either; but big dahlias. . . . We stopped in to see the dahlia dallier, Raoul H. Ayers, but he was

Sad Fat Man

WASHINGTON, Sept. 24.—The question, baldly put, is whether Henry Kaiser is a profiteer or a patriot. I can tell you this much: He is an unhappy fat

man. Even the stuffed pickerel on the wall of the house merchant marine and fisheries committee was drooping in the heat when the 260-pound ship

* builder rushed in "to defend -himself from charges

. Were phony.

preferred by the general-accounting office. Everything seemed to go wrong. He tossed his Homburg in the direction of the hat rack and missed, Then he stood in the center of the jampacked room—with his blue serge suit tightly buttonéd and his stiff collar knifing into his neck. Moisture popped out on his sunburned bald-spot; his thick lensed eyeglasses became misty. And the

angrier he got the more his voice sounded like a

radio de luxe with the basso button turned to the last notch. He thanked God for the chance to testify. He charged his critics. with lying about him. He said the figures presented by the comptroller general Why, he asked, should he be caught

Bin the middle of a feud between the government

accountants and the maritime commission? ‘Never Drew One Cent of Salaries’ HE WIPED his lips, which somehow were thin in the midst of his roly-poly face. And he said he never drew one cent of salaries from any of the Kaiser companies which built $4 billion worth of wartime ships. “And did you have so much as one dollar invested in these yards?" demanded Marvin Coles, the youthful counsel of the committee. That did it. Mr. Kaiser didn't know how much

Aviation

HERE'S AN story of simple aero@ynamics explaining why it to -attempt boosting the present British world speed record of 606 miles an hour in a warm climate than in a cool climate. An aircraft's wing and fuselage are not crashing through unnotified air, On the contrary, a wing moving through the air sets up sound waves. These sound waves, like little. policemen traveling far faster than the wing, race “out ahead two or three plane-lengths and begin to move the air so that when it strikes the wing it will travel smodthly. The airplane wing develops lift by- thé curvature of its surface,-inducing part of the air to travel over the top of the wing and part below. Two-thirds of the lift is developed by the suction pull of the air it slides over the big curvature of the topside of the wing, and one-third by the pressure of the air against the bottom of the wing. So you can see that these little sound-wave policemen racing out ahead of the plane must travel considerably faster than the plane to do their policing duty. As ‘we speed up our wings, 300, 400, 500, 600 miles an hour, we find that the wing is catching up on the coattails of the little sound-wave policemen, not giving these little policemen time enough to get the atmospher# ahead in motion to receive the wing.

Air Becomes Confused

WHEN THE wing travels fast enough to get on the very heels of these sound-wave policemen, the atmosphere becomes confuséd, it splits away from the entering edge of the wing, lift fails to develop, and the wing falls. This is what we call the speed area of compressibility. Anywhere over 600 miles per hour we are crowding the little sound-wave . policemen. Therefore, if we can find some way, or some set of conditions, under which these little sound-wave policemen can travel

My Day

HYDE PARK, Monday.—I have such an accumulation of things about which people have asked me to write that I am going to tell .you about several of them today, even though they have no relation to

each other. I find in my mail an appeal for maternity clothes. Most of the relief agencies are asking for them, since

interesting

is safer

fr.

, there is a great lack of warm clothing of this type

in all the devastated countries. Some of the shops in New York City which specialize in maternity clothes have constituted themselves. as collection agencies where these clothes, if you have any, can be deposited. From there they will be distributed to the various relief agencies. The Girl Scouts and the Camp Fire Girls are the two main ofganizations working with girls in this country on leisure-time activities, Word is sent to me that a membership march is beirig conducted by the Camp Fire Gjrls. This organization takes in girls -from- 7 to 18 years old. And in many places where there are_no Girl Scout

‘groups, there are Camp Fire Girls. x Ww

Both Are Helpful:

THE WORK which these two organizations do is

very similar, and both are very helpful in any éom-

n

s

Down to earth dolls. . . , Dollmaker Mrs. R. O. Price (center), and Butlerites Jody Trostel (left) and Charline Hayes.

out. He'd gone to the Brookside dahlia show tp see more dahlias. His daughter, Pat, who was treading between flower beds to hang clothes, said her father had been raising the flowers “every since I can remember.” Wwe really wanted to see the dahlia expert, too.’ Every since we saw a movie called “The Blue Dahlia” we've been wondering if the flowers really | do come in indigo shade. Huh, Mr. Ayers? . .. Most of that area once belonged to the Hinesley estate, the same family that nearby Hinesley ave. was named for. There are still a lot of Hinesleys in the 4700 block. The sons of Mrs. Myrtle Hinesley, 4739, and their families have moved into several doubles, with the result that you can throw a stone in almost any direction and hit a Hinesley, It must be just natural for Mrs. Hinesley's children to gravitate back to Rookwood. It isn't unusual. Their paternal ancestors, the Hinesleys, were among the first settlers there, while Mrs, Hinesley’s family, the Wagners, have lived on Rookwood since 1900. , . . One of the unusual features of the street is that the trees lining the curbs are pear trees, rather than the usual walnut, oak or elm. The area toward 46th, we understand, used to be a pear orchard. ., .., In autumn the sidewalks are covered with pears, instead of leaves, We'd gotten used to walking on sidewalks that looked like someone had upset a fruit wagon but we were a little surprised once. We noticed one particularly squashed up bunch of fruit all heaped up. on the sidewalk. Nearby was some broken glass and right in the middle was the top of a Mason fruit jar. We still aren't sure if someone dropped a can of pears or played a joke.

By Frederick C. Othman

Neither did his son, Neither

of his money he had spent. Edgar, who whispered into his right ear. did two others of his associates. Mr. Coles said Mr. Kaiser was quibbling. Mr. Kaiser said he wasn't. Mr. Coles said he made $41,000,000 in ship profits. Mr: Kaiser said he did not, either; he suffered an $18,000,000 loss. Things were getting what you might call confused. Mr. Coles kept asking questions about high finance in the ship business. Mr. Kaiser kept answering, I don't know , , , I don't know , , , I don't ‘know , , .

It’s No Fun to Be Millionaire

BY NOW Chairman Schuyler Otis Bland, representative from Virginia, was getting sore. He said Mr. Kaiser had to answer the questions. Mr. Kaiser said how could he recall mere million dollar details of his billion dollar business? That stopped Rep. Bland. “And I might add that thousands of soldiers and sailors were thankful for the ships our yards built,” Mr. Kaiser roared. His wife, sitting in the second row with a gold chain around .her neck, beamed: Mr. Coles suggested the subject was not gratitude, -but cash. Mr. Kaiser said he'd have to look up about the money. Mr. Coles said he supposed he couldn't” squeeze blood from a stone, Mr. Kaiser said he didn't like to be called a rock. Rep. Bland glared at him. Mr. Coles said please, could he quit evading? “Don’t call my testimony evasions,” Mr. Kaiser | shouted. And so on, the live-long day. I could tell you more, but I don’t think it would mean much, except that it's no fun, obviously, to be a millionaire. Ruins your collar, makes you hoarse, and keeps you testifying before congressmen when you ought to be out west, building things.

- ‘ . . By Maj. Al Williams faster, the wing can travel faster (thus establishing a higher world speed record). ° : We have a partial answer for a while: Higher atmospheric temperature is this partial answer. For instance, with the temperature at 32 degrees | Fahrenheit, sound travels at 1088 feet a second. (I am going to leave out the fractions.) At 70 degrees Fahrenheit, sound travels 1131 feet a second, and at 100 degrees Fahrenheit, sound travels 1160 feet a second. This is all at sea.level where speed records are made, ‘Notification’ Needed AT 1088 FEET a second the little sound-wave policemen are making about 740 miles an hour. That is when the atmospheric temperature is 32 degrees Fahrenheit. Now,.if we run these speed tests in a locality where the temperature is 100 degrees Fahrenheit, we speed up the little sound-wave policemen so they skip through the air at 790 miles per hour, about 50 miles an hour. faster than they can travel through the air with the temperature at 32 degrees Fahrenheit. The problem, therefore, resolves itself into designing wing contours which will develop lift but will require less policing of the atmosphere ahead. As we know, a wing has to divide the air at its entering edge with part flowing above the wing and part below. The less disturbance made by a wing in doing this work, the less warning the air ahead will need. Generally speaking, we are feeling our way toward such wing designs. New wings will be tried first in wind tunnels and then in life-sized aircraft flown by men,

* By Donna Mikels)

sort.

gain should not be allowed to ex-

SECOND SECTION

(Second of a Series)

By EMMA RIVERS MILNER Times Church Editor KANSAS CITY,;*Kas., Sept. 24.— “After all, the mother in any family is the greatest influence you have, “Probably anybody who amounts to anything points back to the mother.” A Thus spoke the Most Rev. Paul C. Schulte, archbishop-elect of Indian apolis, in his home here, Archbishop Schulte was born on a farm near Fredericktown, Mo., the eighth child in a family of nine. He was three when:his father died. His mother remained on the land and brought up her children there.

» » . IN SPITE of the exacting duties of operating the farm with the added responsibilities of motherhood, Mrs. Schulte found time daily to gather her sons and daughters about her for family prayers and to recite the rosary with them every

night. The new archbishop is of German extraction. His paternal grand-

German schools and played the organ in various churches of the Rhineland. The Schultes nave always been Catholics. The archbishop has never attended any school or college but a Catholic one, He likes to walk and “shoots golf in the 70's.” The Rev. Rr. William T. Dolan imparted the latter fact. Archbishop Schulte thinks every walker needs a destination and so each day he fetches the mail from his post office box a mile and a half from his official residence.

” ” » ENVISION him coming out of his house on Sandusky st, dressed in black with a clerical vest, a Panama hat in summer and a felt one now. Sandusky is one of the modest streets in" this city with working people living along it, according to Father Dolan. They all greet the archbishop—men, women, children —as he proceeds along. “They're all his friends,” was Father Dolan’s comment, ; The official residence on Sandusky is built of brick, is extremely wide and not very far back from the street. Inside, a grand staircase leads to the second floor rooms and the chapel where the archbishop says mass every morning, The chapel seemed beautiful, a miniature church tucked away upstairs, with an imposing gold and white altar, a tabernacle, stations of the cross, art glass windows and

father was a general professor in -

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he Indianapolis

TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 1946

BUT THE archbishop who does not. indulge in superlatives pronounced it “just an ordinary chapel.” In the house, the Rev, Fr. Alexander Harvey, chancellor of the diocese, maintains an office as does Father Dolan, editor of the diocesan paper, the Eastern Kansas Register. The house is a 45 minute drive from the Cathedral of the Immaculate Conception of the -Blessed Virgin Mary in Leavenworth, - Pather Harvey sees in the Leavenworth cathedral a resemblance to the historic cathedral at Bardstown, Ky. In the Leavenworth cathedral which is modified Roman style, the now archbishop-elect of Indianapolis was installed bishop. . Ld os HE WAS consecrated a bishop in the Old Cathedral of St. Louis nine years ago. Prior to-this, all his pastoral service was in the old cathedral, first as assistant and later, as rector. It is a coincidence that the Most Rev. Joseph E. Ritter,

Louis.

walnut kneeling benches.

Aachen Is

By EDWARD W. BEATTIE United Press Staff Correspondent AACHEN, Germany, Sept. 24— Children, old people and ruins— that is Aachen. The city the "1st division Oct. 21, 1944, to become the first major city to fall, still looks as if the fighting ended yesterday. Only the return of the population has brought it life of a

About 111,000 persons live here now against the 165,000 before the

By WILLIAM A. O'BRIEN, M. D.EXCESSIVE weight gain in pregnancy results from self-indulgence by expectant mothers who have been told that they are “eating for two.” Obstetricians have found that the weight of the newborn child is seldom affected by how much the mother eats, except in the cases of extreme deficiency. Total weight gain in pregnancy averages 28 pounds. (The weight

ceed 25 per- cent of the mother’s original weight.) At birth, the

which surrendered tof

Kenrick seminary, St. Louis.

whom he succeeds as archbishop, goes to St.

After receiving his M. A. degree

at St. Francis Solanus college, Quincy, Ill, Archbishop Schulte took his theological education at

ARCHBISHOP REDUCED CHURCH DEBT, BUILT SIX NEW PARISHES—

‘Man of Many Accom

3

The old cathedral of St. Louis where Arch bishop Joseph E. Ritter will be transferred.

diocesan debt from

missions and three churches and schools.

in the process of being built. ” ”

been erected and given to the manhas fostered street preaching, mis

men for the priesthood. His diocesan paper goes into 90 per cent of the homes in the diocese. When reminded of his accomplishments as a priest of the church, Archbishop Schulte countered:

mighty God.”

ties and the forming of new ones he philosophized: “I have just as in 8t. Louis. break away from them.

its fine people and it's not dif cult to make friends.” .

plish

He has reduced the Leavenworth $1,000,000 to less than $100,000 and has established six new parishes, two new combined A home for the aged has been purchased and equipped and a new orphanage is

» A WING has been added to one Catholic hospital while another has

agement of nuns. The archbishop

sions: and the training of young

“No matter what you" are, the whole pattern of your life—Catholic priests included—is due to Al-

Concerning the uprooting °of old

wonderful friends here It's hard to In America, almost every community has

ments

The Most Rev. Joseph E. Ritter, present archbishop of the

Indianapolis Catholic diocese, who will be transferred to St. Louis.

Still Picture of War's Destruction

war. Only 2000 defied Adolf Hitler's orders for a mass evacuation and cowered in their cellars during the eight-day battle that smashed the city. Like most city dwellers in Germany these days, the people of the city of Charlemagne have to scrape in the ruins for even a dingy existence. Only 40 per cent of them are fit for jobs in the tire factory, the freight car repair shops, -and the handful of small industries. Some of the big textile mills still

increase in weight is accounted for as follows: Infant, afterbirth and membranes, 11 pounds; uterus, 21% pounds, breasts, 3 pounds; storage of protein, 4 pounds; increase of liquid portion of blood and tissue fluid, 7%: pounds. The average mother leaves the hospital after the birth of her child weighing within a pound or two of her prepregnancy weight. ow. . EXPECTANT MOTHERS are urged by their physicians to replenish their tissues without adding

SILLY NOTIONS

Some of these new designs will succeed-—some will fail—as we boost the world's speed record closer and | closer to the speed of sound. The closer the wing crowds the sound-wave policemen ahead, the greater the problem. 1t is almost llke expesting a crowd of people to do just what it should do in the interests of order without being notified.

By Eleanor Roosevelt

munity. I have always hoped that the two would merge, since I feel it would make for less overhead and more efficient planning, but this still seems to be in the future. 4 ! It certainly is necessary that leisure-tinie activi-| ties be planned for young girls in every community. There are very excellent people working on the program of the Camp Fire Girls and their work should be encouraged, because character building cannot be confined only to school hours.

Physically Handicapped FROM October 6th to 12th, weé will observe a week to be known as “National Employ the Physically Handicapped Week.” Public law 176, passed by the 9th congress, established the observance of this week. Last year, the U. 8S. employment service, because of the ceremonies and the public interest aroused, succeeded in placing 13,439 handicapped people. And it was estitfated that private agencies placed at least as many more, gy More than 3000 .cities have planned ceremonies to| emphasize the neéd for émploying as many handicapped people as possible, “This public interest is vitally imortant to our wounded veterans, but the, number of other handicapped people in many ‘communities far outnumbers the veterans.

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“ANOTHER ‘BUBBLE

AND I'LL TAKE YOUR GUM AWAY / 7»

By Palumbo

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| clofhes which were worn by a wom-

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lare usable’ But management is broke; and if it tried to resume operations, there would be no labor. Electric light has been restored, the water supply almost re-estab-lished, and there is even gas to cook with in some parts of the city. But many inhabitants have neither a stove to cook on, nor a house to heat, Communal kitchens serve 16,000 meals daily. More than 1800 persons still live in the big concrete air raid bunkers built by Hitler.

THE DOCTOR SAYS: Weight Gain Should Be Gradual—

Watch Diet, Expectant Mothers

jadditional body fat. Many women through boredom develop the habit of eating between meals or going down at night for raids on the icebox. The attentive husband usually indulges his wife at this time by searching the stores for things which she fancies. This is a comendable practice unless it results in excessive weight gain or interference with regular meals. Too little weight gain may be just as undesirable as too much. An increase in weight in normal pregnancy is inevitable: failure to gain actually means loss, Recent studies have shown that mothers on deficient diets may harm their babies, as the fetus is essentially a parasite as far as nutrition is concerned.

» » ” IF THE MOTHER has the food, the baby will get it, but if she cannot supply it, he will have to go without. = Such infants may be nearly normal- in weight but may show deficiencies in other ways. Weight gain in pregnancy should be gradual and persistent. (Excessive gain should be called to the attention of the physician in charge.) Expectant mothers need plenty of protein in the form of meat, eggs, fish and milk, certain cereals, and vegetables. 3 In the old days, mothers were warned about the dangers of eating too much meat ‘at this time, but mothers who get an extra ration of meat do best. il Minerals such as calcium, iron, phosphorus, and .others can be supplied by the diet. Milk and certain vegetables are good sources of iron. Extra fruit will not only supply minerals “and vitamins, but it will also be laxative. Cooked fruits twice a day may obviate the use of cathartics,

” ” ” Question: I have been. given some an who had cancer. Are they dan-

gerous? ? Answer: No; cancer is not con-

Other thousands live several toa room in homes where authgrities have requistioned all spare space. Where others live, nobody knows. Perhaps in basement caves under the rubble, This sort of existence — here as elsewhere — is a source of-great worry to control authorities because of the disease danger. Aachen's sewers will not be repaired for years. Seepage, meanwhile, will be a constant threat.

Try te Help Themselves British control officers: who took over from the Americans 15 months ago give Aacheners full credit for trying to help - themselves. Swiss

| charity supplies 20,000 meals weekly to children under 6, and has furnished 20 wooden barracks. Buitish Quakers operate a youth camp and clubs. With this outside assistance, G&man churches and the German | Red Cross are striving to cope with {the worst needs. ; | .But in a city like Aachen there {is nothing but “worst need.” How [can there be anything eise when a city has 43 per cent of its buildings destroyed completely, 21 per cent damaged heavily and 19 per cent damaged slightly? Men and women work steadily at the incredible job of clearing rubble. Years of work lie ahead before there can be any thought of real rebuilding. Everyone is shabby and hungry. A cold winter is coming. The coal mines are close to town, but Aachen gets none of the coal. The people Just watch long trains of coal cars pass over the Belgian border west of here.

From War to Peace When you leave Aachen and pass down the Cologne read that led the 1st army to the Rhine, it: is like

passing from war to peace. Apples are in the orchards, the potato crop is plentiful and the "haystacks fat and golden. Even Huertgen forest hides its secret with thick green. Only occasionally do you pass a burned-out Sherman tank or a wrecked Wehrmacht self-propelled gun, a dynamited Nazi pillbox or a sign warning: “Both sides of road still mined for next 500 yards.” At Juelich, where the river Roer was stormed, the stream still is half choked with war's wreckage. The village itself is a ruin smothered in green foliage Beyond Juelich, the sheep graze on the slopes and peace takes over the landscape again, The advance through this area went at top speed ghd there is hardly a sign of battle. Then the twin towers of Cologne cathedral soar out of the flat Rhine plain, and the shattered mass of the city closes ‘in around you, and you are back in the war. again—the war that will still be with Germany

imes

spread, causing the engine's wheels

PAGE 11

Navy Plane——— z i

| Submarines

To Be Ready For Atom War

By DONALD J. GONZALES United Press Staff Correspondent

WASHINGTON, Sept. 24, — The navy is drafting radical changes in its submarine force for the first time in over 20 years, it was learned today. Wa Ideas currently under study by the navy's top submarine envisage underwater vessels carrying guided missiles with atomic warheads, They also plan submersible tankers, aircraft, personnel and cargo care riers. To. direct planning for the navy's new submarine force, Adm. Chester W. Nimitz, chief of naval opera tions, has created the office of une dersea warfare. Its chief is Rear Adm. Charles W, Styer, who has served in the navy's submarine forces for 24 years. ” » » ADM. STYER told the United Press today that the navy would not be caught napping again in the submarine field should the United

States be required to fight another War, “It is apparent that while some efforts were made in the submarine field between world war I and world war IL” he sald, “those.efforts did not match the technical and tace tical advances made by the Gere mans during the same period. We have, in a way of speaking, been twice burned.” Adm. Styer sald he had been die rected by Adm. Nimitz to investi gate and exploit all recent develops ments applicable to undersea ware fare, including the possibilities pre sented by the advent of atomie power, :

» " “MANY NEW types of submae rines may be expected in the future growing out of special wartime tasks asigned our submarines in the Pacific,” Adm. Styer said. The new submersibles, he said, will represent the first major change in design since 1925. > “We visualize bombardment and carrier submarines designed to carry guided missiles or pilotless aircraf undetected to the shores of any future enemy. “Picket submarines, transports and cargo carriers will be developed as necessary to provide for hemispheric defense. Such types must be capable of operating in any wae ters from the Arctic to the tropics.®

» ” ~ ADM. STYER said the navy’s fue ture submarine force must be pree pared as soon as possible to strike with the type of underwater vessels he outlined. “The navy’ must be prepared in the future to meet attack from une der the sea by true submersibles capable of maneuvering submerged in. definitely, at high speed and at great depths,” he added. : Adm. Styer would not predict when atomic power or jet engines might be used in submarines. Bug he pointed out that any reduction in the size or weight of the power plants in submarines would allow the navy to strengthen hulls against attack by atomic weapons,

We, the Wome | Meat Shortage

| Baffling to

Housewives

{ By RUTH MILLETT THE HOUSEWIFE wearily trudge ing from meat-market {0 meats market is a little confused by the empty show-cases. When she asks the butcher how soon the meat famine will be over, he answers, with a shrug of his shoulders: “Not until we get rid

of OPA” Every butcher has the same ane swer for her. That means she is supposed to get mad at OPA, ges fed up with meatless menus, and demand that price ceilings be taken off meat,

» » ” BUT OPA is supposed to be on her side—to exist for the protection of the consumer. If she turns against OPA, is she helping herself ~or somebody else? Maybe the show-cases would be full of meat again, if there were no price ceilings on it. But would she, the ayerage consumer, be able to buy much of it if it also zoomed in price? Poor housewife, she is caught in the middle. It's no easy problem to feed a family three meals a day with no meat other than an oce casional pound of cold cuts,

” ” » HER BUTCHER tells her OPA must. go. Her common sense tells her OPA is her protection against skyrockete ing prices. Her family tells her, “Gee, but it would be nice to have one of your nice, thick pot-roasts for dinner, ine stead of this leathery lunch meat.” She's in a tough spot, and she wishes somebody would tell her exactly what she is supposed to de about it.

RAILS SPLIT, TRAIN . DETOURS TRAFFIC

Motorists who usually drive to work via W. Morris st. had to dee tour this morning. The reason: A freight train backs’ ing into a siding at the Inland Cone tainer Corp., 700 W. Morris st., sank between the rails and wouldn's budge. Section hands, engineers and po lice worked an hour to remove the accidental blockade. Railroad officials said the ralls

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