Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 11 October 1946 — Page 8
| HINDU-MOSLEM TALKS END NEW DELHI, Oct. 11 (U, P).~ Talks between the Hindu-led Con-| gress party and the Moslem league over inclusion of the Moslems in the Indian interim government have broken down, it was reported unofficially today.
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“UP TO TRUMAN
risis Discussed at Longl,
Cabinet Meeting. (Continued From Page One) |
with morsels instead of the | full meals Americans are demand- | ing. he | At Cincinnati, o. Senator Robert | A. Taft (R. QO. labeled as “shock= | ing” the 4silly proposal” that meat
be imported from Argentina while
the nation's supply of beef on the hoof was “the greatest ever.” Such an action, the Senator asserted, would “be the administration's tude toward business
general atti-
“After all, what is the difference if. a temporary supply is obtained to tide us over until after
elections? The possible destruction | of the livestock business in the U. 8.| would be of little importance compared to losing an election,” he | said. Urges Meat Decontrol (He sald that OPA should decontrol meat and other items potentially in plentiful supply). The election-conscious administration leaders looked serious when they came out of the cabinet room. There was little of the usual good-natured bantering when they faced reporters, | It is understood some of the] administration's chief advisers feel the _meat shortage has reached a where the only realistic question to be decided is: To decontrol or not decontrol. In his only public statement on that question thus far President Truman has strongly opposed decontrol. May Give Ruling Tonight { Mr. Anderson told reporters that | he may do something tonight about a petition of the beef industry advisory committee asking that beef
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be removed from price control. The committee feels such action | would start slaughtering again and | in a few weeks get meat back on to | American tables. Mr. Anderson said he expected a report from his staff tonight. on the decontrol petition. If the report is complete and the necessary figures accompany it, the secretary said, he may act on the petition tonight He said meat importation in it-| self could not meet piled up Ameri- | can demand. Purchase of Argen-| tine canned beef would help a little, it was agreed, but only a flood of fresh beef from American ranges can satisfy the country's growing! appetite. And beef supplies from Canada | and Mexico would be too small to 60 much good, according to. Mr. Anderson. Embargo Big Snag |
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Meanwhile, agriculture depart-| ment experts doubted there was any | chance of lifting the embargo which prevents import of fresh Argentine beef, They contended only congress could do that. They added there is considerable sentiment for maintaining the embargo, which was enacted for the expressed purpose of safeguarding American cattle from] hoof and mouth disease. | Rep. Emanuel Celler (D. N. Y) dissented from the assertion that only congress could lift the embargo. He said President Truman could—and should—suspend the quarantine under emergency authority granted in the 1930 tariff act. Senators Joseph PF. Guffey (D Pa.) and James Huffman (D. O) called on Mr, Truman. Mr. Guffey declared to reporters that the meat shortage was “entirely due” to Senator Taft and “the tri-state morticiar from Nebraska.” He said he referred to senate Republican Whip Kenneth S. Wherry, an old foe of meat price control. Senator Huffman said he favored decontrol “if the facts warrant it DUE pot at any price.”
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poss’ bomb missions directed at
Japan. Hoover said Comer and the unnamed ex-servicemen had given copies of the pictures to several unauthorized persons throughout the country. Copies already have been recovered from persons in Texas, California and North Carolina. A spokesman refused to say whether other arrests would follow. They will be arraigned later in the day before a U. 8. commissioner here on charge of violating a statute prohibiting reproduction,
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES.
~INEAT DECISION 3 Seized With A.
has
Bo Bort Photos
. {himself but inflicted only a slight
any photograph, in keeping withdrawing, resentation 9 [naval
penalties of $1000 fine, one year in| the | prison,
(P.).—~Miles Frederick Daubenheyer,| |arrested in Baltimore in connection |state school, an institution for the with attempted sale of atomic bomb |feeble-minded,
sketch, picture, map or geographical repof vital military or installations, If convicted they face maximum
Miles Frederick Daubenheyer
pictures, was identified today as the son of Dr. John Daubenheyer. The elder Mr, staff physician at the Muscatatuck
or both.
BUTLERVILLE, Ind., Oct. 11 (U.
2
Sr ——
MAN KILLS WIFE, "NEPHEW IN FIGHT
(Continued From Page One)
he shot his wife when she tried to grab his 38-caliber pistol as two men summoned by ~-his daughter,
rushéd into the apartment. He then fired at the two. His nephew, Gerald Waite, 21,
recently discharged navy veteran was killed, and his brother-in-law | Edward Heppner, 52, was wounded. Mathews then turned the gun on
scalp wound.
ay FRIDAY. OCT. 11, 1946.
had been arguing for some time |. ‘about an adopted son, Jack, wha i§ in the navy, and that. Mrs. Mathews left him somedmonths ago. Last night, as he lay in the hospital he kept calling “Jean! Jean,” attendants said. Police Chief Frank Flood sald Mathews apparently hid in a small shower room in his wife's apartment as he waited for her to come home from work.
NAME EDITORS AT
INDIANA CENTRAL
Eulene Reed, Indiana Central col-|
lege senior, Bremen, Ind, has been named editor of The Reflector,
Daughter Summons Aid Mathews told police he had talked | his wife, Jean, 36, out of getting a divorce when the men called by his daughter, Shirley,” 18, burst | into the room.
The divorce hearing was to have | begun today. Police said Mathews told them
Daubenheyer is a|
that it must have been after the |
{third shooting that he wrote the Stone, {message on the tablecloth in blood, | tor;
“but I don't remember doing that.” | Mathews said he and his wife!
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