Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 24 September 1946 — Page 3

Pre

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BERRY ) of buying any meat in polis today continued to

dark. Butchers displayed cases bare except for a few hunks of luncheon meats, perhaps a shank or two, oc-

stockyards were light, as they have been the past month. Market officials said the bulk of receipts are going to shippers, not to local three Indiana colfederal government to slaughter their own meat for their cafeterias. The schools, Butler .and Notre Dame universities and Culver military academy, yesterday sent telegrams petitioning Agriculture Secretary Clinton P. Anderson and OPA Chief Paul Porter for such permission, stating sufficient supplies could nof be obtained under present conditions. L U. Declines Petitions The petitions asked that the schools be allowed to buy at ceiling prices whatever meat needed and sald the slaughtering would be done by authorized packing plants. Indiana university had” been asked to join the petitioners, it was learned, but declined to do so. An Indiana university spokesman today said the school would, however, join a movement to obtain abolition of controls from meat

ted. Rep. Gerald W. Landis today sent a telegram to Mr. Anderson, asking removal of controls from livestock and meat products. “Economic chaos stares the nation in the face due to the collapse of the meat industry under OPA control,” Mr, Landis charged. “The remady lies in the immediate and total termination of price controls on livestock and meat __ products,” he said. AFL Joins Abolition Move The Indiana council of the American Federation of Labor, reversing its previous stand, has joined in the campaign for ‘abolition of "such controls, an A. F. of L. spokes man said. Meanwhile Indiana Grocers and Meat Dealers association in an effort to kill OPA, have asked. its

paper petition” campaign. of wrapping paper on their “empty

’ counters” with a head which would read “The people whose signatures

of the petitions were completed in

now on their second petition.

¢

was reinstated. Half-Day Schedules “We won't have any until we get rid of OPA” is the almost unanimous opinion. While there is no evidence that any shops are completely closed,

schedule.

EWes

from OPA-less period. when they * they OPA was off.” - Large packers Wy ot say def injtely when they eXact meat. On the hog mi light until the latter

.

g

Spring Pigs Slaughtered “Spring pigs will not be for the market until then,”

:

two or three months.”

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“ye got a lot of eight and nin

indicate catle will at the

they elie

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the market “a wh

digi ie

t themselves,

G0-STATE TROOPS

J .

deny entrance to a plant it- physically.”

tered

products, if such a movement were t

We Cooling effects of the cold fronts passage in the east will be mostly the result of a marked drop in the humidity as warm, moist air of tropeial origin is replaced by

FEUD FLARES [etic “IN SHIP PROBE "cr. no.

Butler, Notre Dame Seek 2 i Slaughter Quotas for San 1a "eos / 1 wm Fmen amy A, | at Cafeterias. $1 LOU! By DICK BERR

1. nee. PAT'S PEND. COPA 1946 EOW. 1. A WAGNER ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

NATIONAL 24-HOUR FORECAST SUMMARY: Cooler conditions are promised the northeast and northern portions of the Atlantic seaboard as the less humid, cool air west of the cold front moves into the area. There will be numerous showers and scatthunderstorms from the Gulf states northward along the east coast in the frontal zone. Clearing skies and a noticeable drop in the humidity will follow its passage eastward out to sea. Immediately west of the front there will be partly cloudy skies, while further westward through most of the Mississippi Valley and the Plains states clear conditions and fair weather are indicated. Temperatures east of the Mississippi to the cold front will be | tor relatively low, but slowly rising eratures will prevail in the

Plains states,

Shielding of Maritime Commission - Charged.

(Continued From Page

committee to shield anybody, In-| iar witness*in the current hearing

cl the maritime commission. | ‘ members to institute a “wrapping| : ; | on rates, was president of the ATA's ’ SE Ee er He a oe) pradectssor, the Electric Railways The dealers were to put a piece| roku od % be the best proved. association, in 1927, and is now a

ure,” he said.

“All right, then,” Mr.

appear below want meat, not con- demanded. “When are we going t0| nant marine committee. The group trols” or some other suitable phrase. [8¢t the government The association said that some here?

“We

IMOWNSVILL

drier and cooler air from the | Polar regions. Overcast skies and showers are pictured for Washington and western Montana where a frontal system moving south and eastward ffom the North Pacific and western Canada is becoming partly stationary,” (See standing air front in the Northwestern states). Showers and mostly cloudy con-

Go? onze 0 MY Gp 1HunoLasIONM 700A * a1 N —

wee United States Weather Bureau

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.__ THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES _-

II Butcher's

‘Daily Greeti

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48 > - hy mR ATR

o ? TUESDAY, SEPT. 24, 1946

ng Here

A Rr ERIE AE

THE WEATHER FOTOCAST VIA ACME TELEPHOTO

Preview of U. S. Weather Bureau Forecast for Period Ending 730AM EST 9-25-46

SCATTERED SHOWERS

AREA

the season are. indicated generally over most of the U, 8. though thermometer readings east of the Mississippi may be a bit low as previously noted.

OFFICIAL WEATHER

All Data in Central Daylight Time Sept. 2, 1946—

ditions are forecast for northern

‘Minnesota and portions of adjoining states in the affected area

Sunrise. ...... 6:34 | Sunset...... os Precipitation 24 hrs. ending 7:30 a. m, 42 Total precipitation since Jan, 1 ..... 25.41 Deficiency since Jan, 1 ............uv 4.50

shown on the FOTOCAST. This | “rns following table shows the tempera weather development links wigh a [ture in other cities: High w AROS xexsevereinsornsiovrnns 70 low pressure center north of the ston. 8 a Chicago .. border in Canada. loa ti mn 80 High pressure systems with [Cleveland h » their clockwise air flow patterns |pesneviiie ".. no have become the governing face M- Wayne a 12 in the country’s weather |indianapolis (City) .....c.cee. 70 49 scheme at the moment and the Rants Si eunrins 4 08 customary clearing skies and [Miami ......... ‘ 84 79 cooler conditions associated with |Minnespolls-8t. Paul .......... 3 4 the influence of “highs” is much Kew ok Se . 3 o in evidence on the forecast map |Omahs ..c.. ...os "oon for Tuesday night and Wednes- Pistabursn _seaurere » 8 day morning. *_ |8an ‘Antonio ©... VT. 69 Near normal temperatures. for. |{in, FIociecy -- tm

records in

have no desire to crucify half a day and the butchers were anyone,” Mr. Bland countered. “We

Nation-Wide Drive!

Vice President Reid observed on the

occasion of his eléction that the | time has come to hike streelcar| | and bus fares throughout the na- | tion. /

One) Witness Is Director | |

Willits H. Sawyer, the company’s |

director of the transit association. Mr. Sawyer, a consulting engineer

Weichel

is investigating wartime profits of 19 shipbuilding companies, six of them in the Kaiser empire. He said that one of his firms,

s Reid's company to increase certain

Most Indianapolis butchers say way we can. We will proceed with they have had “no meat” since OPA what we have.”

many of them are operating on a . half-day or two or three-day week [read into the record a statement

Many shops still are able to get mitted . ES ae livers. brains and | counsel, but Mr, Bland cut him

it will be|

said. “When they start coming in may be a little more meat

meat pleture de

want to get the facts the best

Statement Not Admitted

Kaiser Co., Inc., actually lost more than $18 million despite a committee “estimate that it made about $44 millon in shipbuilding. The overall loss, he said, was suffered

Little progress was made during

was joined in a father-and-son act | on the stand by Edgar. The elder Mr. Kaiser tried to

| designed to reply to questions sub-

yesterday’ by committee

|off until the committee should de-

ads. Bu say these are left over|cide it wished to. accept it.

In the prepared statement de-

“People wouldn't buy these cuts| fending himself against charges of uld get steaks and ] you. “We can get said that one of his largest War-|yy nor any of the Kaiser companizs cents on the basis of the old rate, now than when | time shipbuilding enterprises had|paq any interest, directly or indi- compared to 42.4 cents nationally. paid no income taxes because it| ectly in any subcontractors firm.” | with the rate hike the company

fabulous profit-making, Mr. Kaiser

-/had a “net loss in évery year.” e

jressive or unreasonable” fees or | profits in constructing shipyards y 2nd other plant 1lacilities for the

| government, Points to Losses

e-

during that period. |

fams came from spring pigs,’ | Co-Discove rer

| |

(Continued From Page One) ile |

fi-

[lsloating from the pancreas of ani- { mils an /extract which would ald a |defunct” pancreas in keeping the { blood-sugar content of the body at [normal levels,

| A story that had existed for a IS OPENED uc: of, a century that Dr. Best became associated with Dr. Bant-

|ing by winning a coin tossup with a fellow student, was discounted

by last night by Dr, G. H. A. Clowes,

, esearch director emeritus of Eli

Attorneys for the state, in seek- Lilly & Co. Dr, Clowes said that summary judgment against the medical-student Best was -chosen without hearing further evi because he had ‘achieved distinc-

ton as a research student for thor-

per party|%ughness in his work.

Dr. Best modestly and quickly Sposed of the discussion .about eir Important work 25 years ago. "Perhaps they (current writers on diabetes) knew too much. We young mei possessed with an fable curiosity for our prob-

salve the problem, months of Haustive tests and e nts . By November, 1921, the

because it was .necessary to build!

the questioning of Mr, Kaiser, who | a steel plant to supply the materials. Corporation Council Arch N. BobMr. Kaiser argued that “under bitt, opposing the rate hike, was to witness |

the specific provisions” of the renegotiation act all operations of the

one company are lawfully considered analyst of Rochester, N.Y.

as one. Contracts Let by Bidding He said he had no information as | to profits made by the contractors

his shipyards. But he said that the | contracts were mostly let on a fixed price, competitive bidding basis. He added that “neither the Kaiser fam-

He took occasion to repeat his

At the same time, the bald and conviction that his shipbuilding op- | Indianapolis car mile revenue has

portly industrialist emphatically de-| orations as a whole did not earn]; 3 8 stima ents, or of Octo- nied that Kaiser interests made “ex-| a, unreasonable profit. | jumped to an estimated 55 cen

“The’ combined net profits after taxes of the four Kaiser shipbuilding /companies amounted to less

than 1-10th of one per cent of the| Indianapolis Industrial Union countotal volume of work done for the|cil (C. I. O.) voted to ask the city “It is obvious tha: the fees or|maritime commission after deduct-|to buy the railways 3system. The {progts of the Kaiser companies ing all losses” he said. “Even 1f| council resolved that under private Buta retail grocer believes most! were not: unreasonable since thére{the losses on other operations are| management, fares are too high of the spring pigs were put on the | were no fees or profits on the fa-{not deducted, the combined profits{ and service too poor for a growing underweight, when OPA cilities)” he told the hwuse mer-|are less than one per cent.”

of Insulin Tells

| Banting. Subsequent tests with the : ; | dog revealed that they were on the {Aellitug” in those early years. They | ,iont track. : iid a theory how to control the | dark for a few more je ease’ which man had struggled rs say. After that they | Hlainst for 2000 years. It involved

again. Medical the world who wer

and over throughout

watching the experiments soon knew

all about the -faithful dog.

a dog.

normal lives because of Dr. Bant-

work. |

covery of. insulin,” Dr, Best said.

or subcontractors in the building of | mile at the 6! -cent rate exceeded

The young men grew fond of the

have benefited directly through his

The seven persons climaxed an

of New York, testified yesterday to support a theory of utility~depreciation that the association holds dear and which it is using in the Philadelphia rate case. In 1942, Mr, Sawyer made a study for. railways which enabled Mr.

depreciation charges 100 per cent. By ballooning its “depreciation charges, the company is able to show a- potential. operating deficit, on which it bases its plea for higher fares. Hopes for 8 Cent Floor The ATA's interest in Indianapolis 1s not confined to giving Indianapolis Railways a boost over its fare hump. /The ATA has been vitally concérned in the’ Indianapolis situation because the 6% basic rate here has loomed as a black mark on ATA's charts of progress toward higher fares. Thé ATA'is Interested in establishing an 8 cent floor on fares in major U. 8. cities. It was handicapped in this program by Indianapolis’ 8 cent rate.

This morning, meanwhile, City

cross-examine company

Edward S. Quinn¥ a statistical

The city planned to show on the | basis of Mr. Quinn's evidence, given on direct examination, that the Indianapolis Railways revenue per the national average by 2.8 cents. Based on Mileage

Car mile revenue here was 45.2

got via circuit court injunction,

ASKS WALLACE

AID IN WOOING

Hannegan Invites Ousted Secretary to Speak on | Congress Races.

By LYLE C. WILSON United Press Staff Correspondent WASHINGTON, Sept. 24—The big city vote will be the election day pay-off on bets whether Presi. dent Truman damaged Democratic prospects by firing Henry A. Wal~ lace from the commerce department, There are 92 cities in the United States with more than 100,000 persons. . Chairman Robert E. Hannegan of the Democratic national committee must have been thinking of them yesterday when he issued a cordial invitation to Mr.- Wallace to speak for Democratic candidates in the congressional campaign, Nothing could be further from Mr. Hannegan's mind than tossing Mr. Wallace out of the party merely because he was tossed out of the cabinet. The national committee has no tossing authority, anyway. Mr, Hannegan's job is to direct the campaign to hold Democratic control of the senate and house.

Study Record Books

He and politicians of both parties are studying the form and record

things, that the Democrats in 1044 polled more votes than the Republicans in all but eight of those 92 big cities. Mr. Wallace's greatest vote appeals lies in the big towns..

They show that every New England city of more than 100,000 population voted Democratic in 1944 when the late Franklin D. Roosevelt was a fourth-term candidate. All but one of the Middle Atlantic -states cities voted the same way.” The dissenter was Yonkers, N. Y., which cast only 43.7 per cent of its major party votes for Democratic candidates,

Likely to Lose Ground

Of the 17 east north central big cities, five went Republican: Peoria, Ill.; Cincinnati, O.; Grand Rapids, Mich.; Indianapolis, Ind, and Ft. Wayne, Ind. Wichita, Kas., was the Republican holdout among 10 west north central states big cities. Tulsa, Okla. alone in the South balked at a fourth term. Mr, Roosegelt carried all the big cities off the mountain and Pacific coast areas. Without the late President's lead ership the Democrats are likely to fall behind their 1944 voting record this year. Excluding the 122 seats filled from southern states, the house of representatives breaks down this way: Ninety-four big city northern constituencies sent to congress last time 70 Democrats, 23 Republicans and Vito Marcantonio, the American Labor party member from New York. - Dewey Carried 12.States

Eighty-six northern rural constituencies sent to the house 23 Democrats, 62 Republicans and Rep. Merlin Hull, a member of Wisconsin's Progressive party which now has «dissolved. ? gel, hundred and thirty-three nort mixed districts sent 4

Democrats. Kansas was the banner Republican state in 1944, It cast 60.6 per cent of its major party vote for Governor Thomas E. Dewey of New

TY 4 | Later he was taken to<hospital in

one house 100 Republicans and: 33

Try Gazelle Boy At the Speedway?

(Continued From Page One)

Co., and there he received first aid.

” ” ” DR. JALBOUT, one of the specialists who has examined the boy, said: * “I think he is the fastest human on earth and.he could halve any record in the world. “He acts, eats and cries like a gazelle. “There is no doubt that he is a human being who was brought up by the gazelles after having been abandoned by his mother. Bedouins often abandon their children in the desert.” y » » » HOSPITAL attendants said the 15-year-old boy seems torn between instincts acquired in the desert and the normal feelings of a human being. They sald he imitates everyone around him and that he has the curiosity of a 2-year-old child. During his first few days in the hospital, the boy tried constantly to escape.

CROSSTOWN BUS SERVICE ASKED

Civic Group Seeks Improved

Transit Service. The South, West and North sides, |

books. They show, among Other as well as the East side, should |

have crosstown transportation serv. | ice to place Indianapolis out of the | “slow” category, in the opinion of| George Traut, president of the] Emerson Heights civic league. i His group is obtaining signatures

‘ The American Institute of Publicity, a petition asking for crosstown| Opinion has tabulated past records. service between 21st st. and Eng-

lish ave. One of the city's new- | est and most active civic organiza- | tions, the Emerson Heights league | hopes to obtain at least 1000 signatures before presenting the pe-| titions to Indianapolis Railways, | Inc.™ | At a meeting last night, most of those present favored extending crosstown service to include ‘Bight- | wood and Beech Grove. However, | the shorter distance would be ac-| ceptable, they indicated. Pupils Inconvenienced

Railroad workers and Howe high ienced greatly hy lack of adequate transportation facilities, Mr. Traut added.

apolis Federation of Civic clubs were Arthur Group, Earl Ballister, Mrs. Richard Lawson, Cecil: McConahay and Mrs. Herman Stoelk.

following neighborhood indignation over the eviction of a day nursery. Residents charged the property owner required the nursery to move so that a tavern might occupy the quarters. A continued vigilance has

they asserted.

NEHRU QUITS PARTY POST NEW DELHI, India, Sept. 24 (U. P.).—Pandit Jawaharlal Nehru, premier of the new Indian interim government, resigned as president

terday.

school pupils are being inconven-|

Elected delegates to the Indian-|

The league was formed last spring |

been maintained to prevent this,

|SEN. CAPEHART HITS

LEFT WING POLITIC

A major issue in the coming election is the ideological clash between communism and democracy, U. S. Senator Homer E. Capehart told the Irvington Republican club last night. The Democratic administration leans tar to. the left, toward communism, he charged, while the G. O. P, offers “candidates who will adhere to the constitution 100 per cent.” Senator Capehart. termed Henry A. Wallace, whose recent clash with the state department over foreign

|lary of commerce, the leader of the :

American left wing group. He laid the foreign policy mixup to “New |Deal efforts to placate minority | groups without thinking of the good of the whole people.” = On the same program, Albert J, Beveridge Jr, Republican candi date for 11th district congressman, said election of a Republican-con-trolled congress would he the “firet step to abolish the confusion and chaos that now exists within the present administration.” He outlined~a six-point program for his campaign-—a decent minimum wage, more and better homes, better educational facilities for all, decent” and proper treatment for veterans; better understanding between labor and management and |equal opportunity for everyone.

policy led to his dismissal as secreF—~ =

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styled

a. Blue, beige. Sizes 3

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Crisp charmers for Big ‘n’ Little Sister,

of Hope Skillman fabric.

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of the all-India congress party yes-|

b. Grey, beige. Sizes 3fo 6 only..... .. 8.98

- Children’s and Girls’ Shops, Fourth Floor

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York, nominee. ‘Mr. Dewey carried 12 states for 99 electoral votes, Any election decded by 3 per cent or less of the inajor- party

[12.6 cents above the national aver-

| age. | One new element was injected into the rate fight last night. The

| community.

How Dog

«Shared in Development and Isolation of Drug

gO into pem for| end of the pasture || they say, will keep ||

Dr. Elliott P. Joslin, Harvard uni

| Boston, introduced the diabetic

Other speakers besides Dr. Bes

| diana university school of medicine

Prof. institute of

versity and George F. Bake clinic, 5 | representing each decade of life

dog in their experiments. In their from a 2-yedr-old girl to a 70-year papers Margery was mentioned over| old man.

men e/and Dr. Joslin included Dr. J. O.

| Ritchey, professor of medicine, In- LOC ; AL

| Dr. Franklin B. Peck, Lilly research

In a mural showing medical Prog- | jaboratories: Dr. John R. Willi - | “ . A ams, ress in the "Rochester Academy. of .,neuitant in medicine, University

Medicine, Rochester, N. Y. Mar-|o¢ Rochester: gery, the collie-sized mongrel Who | goussay gave her life for science, has a cen- | guenos Aires; Dr. Joseph H. Barach, tral Plact in he mural. The mod- | ma] clinic, University of Pittsburgh; est scientists shared thelr glory With n, RD." Lawrence, King's college|card party in the Food Craft shop,

Bernardo A. physiology,

| won six of his 12 states by less than |

| 3 per cent of the major party vote, those close states were Indiana, Maine, Iowa, Wyoming, Wisconsin and Ohio.

FDR Won 36 States

Mr. Roosevelt carried 36 states for 432 electoral votes.

than 3 per cent. They were Michigan, New Jersey,

New Hampshire, New York, Oregon,

chusetts.

> Whether those 19 states standing fast or drifting one way or the other will pretty largely de-

congressional elections and of the

t presidential elections in 1948,

BRIEFS

Ralph VanStan auxiliary 2041, V. F. W, will have a pillow slip

| hogpital, London; Prof. Carl Cori, Pennsylvania and Ohio sts. at 1:30

Denmark.

Dr. Banting, a veteran of world ing's and Dr. Best's work, the latter war I, lost his life in an airplane scientist was queried on how he|accident during world war II, while felt to see grateful persons who|he was conducting experiments for the Royal Air Force. Dr. Banting [received the Nobel prize. for his “I am proud to have had part in work with insulin and was knighted. the experiments that led to the dis- g

| problems. ee

«0 2 ?

Dr. Best, professor and head of {the department of physiology at the University of Toronto, continues to of the Broadway Methodist church afternoon of scientific ‘discussions do research. still possessing that Thursday. "St injection of insulin was given{celebrating the 25th, anniversary of “insatiable curiosity” for medical , named Margery, by Dr.|the discovery'of insulin, ~~. :

“-~ 5

Yesterday, as seven decades of | Washington university, 8t. Louis, |p. m, tomorrow, persons who take insulin for dia-| Mo. and Dr. H C. Hagedorn, Nor- ie betes paraded before the scientists | disk insulin laboratorium, Gentofte, to show that they can live happy,

Tribe No. 18, Improved Order, of Red Men tomorrow night will Mature movies of the 1945 World Series. The meeting will be at 8 p. m. at 137 W. North st. >

Mrs. Helen Hall of the L. 8. Ayres & Co., will speak on “Home Planning” at the 12:45-p."m. luncheon meeting of the Alice Meirer circle

“The luncheon will be held at ‘the home of Mrs. ‘William W: Nunnally, 2330 N.-Talbott st.

. wie

the G. O. P. presidential |

vote cast is a close one where aj % slight trend either way next time | ¢

‘might reverse the result. Mr. Dewey

There were 13 very close ones, all won by less

Pennsylvania, Missouri, Idaho, Illinois, Maryland, |

Connecticut, Minnesota and Donon

are

The fall powow of Red Cloud

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{ ®,

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Store Hours 9:00 to 5:25

>

sade | Tuesday thru Saturday

Closed Each Monday

»

Man

ARCO, I , A week frc yo! explosive will be ‘set proving gre pens when plodes at o The test in the cents In other st. be more tl additional j The idea additional If the na: figured con tact. If the selected gre an even pected—anc is billed as liberate pe: Capt. We commander

ordnance A —————

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