Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 27 November 1946 — Page 5

WEDNESDAY, NOV. 27, 1948

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rare wg |SMPAN FRIENDLY | fan T0 AMERICAN RULE | Bares! pr

Plenty Operators No Waiting | Navy Makes Best Progress There in Educating, ‘SAVE Housing - and Feeding - the Natives. ;

OPEN Open Daily Editor's Note: To give you ‘a clearer picture of the problems on ROYAL SPECIALS ROYAL

8:30 A. M. already besetting the Pacific islands over which the United States is demanding exclusive control, an NEA staff writer takes you on sree PERMANENT HERE'S WHAT YOU GET

2225,000-mile tour of that vast ocean domain. This is the third of four dispatches based on his extensive trip. ® A Fine Guarane Wed Permanent!

By DOUGLAS LARSEN a $ 24 n Supplies Used. Y

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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES Rocketeer

, 21, 1946

WOODMEN TO MARK 6000 NEIGHBOR DAY

Indianapolis Modern Woodmen camps will co-operate ‘with others throughout the nation in sponsorship of a Good Neighbor observance next Monday. Marion camp will be host for local activities to be held at 8 p. m. in the hall, 322 E. New York st. The program will honor 35 world war II members. E. H. Wilson, state manager, will deliver a special tribute. Each veteran will be presented with a gift! by Harry E. Argus. | Entertainment will include music, | group-singing and a movie of Alas-| ka taken by Judge Ralph Hamill of | superior court 5. Refreshments will! be served. |

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Chalmers H. (“Slick”) Goodlin, of Greensburg, Pa. 23-year-old Bell Aircraft test pilot, will take up the army's new rocket-pro-pelled XS-1 on its first flight un der power at Muroc field, Cal. The

SAIPAN, Nov. 27.—The U. S. navy's efforts at playing nursemaid to 85,000 half-naked natives on the ex-Japanese \islands of the Pacific are producing slow but steady results— mostly by giving the natives | - —_— more food, clothing and the war, the going is not as smooth

NEA Staff Writer Must Be Pleased!

: All Work I's hn plane's designed speed is 1700 Charter members of the newly | 1 rist and Guaranteed] laughs than the Japanese gave a ii 1s On Saja want U. 8. citi- | miles per hour, but Mr. Goodlin organized Butler University Eques- ESTABLISHED 30 YEARS PHONE RI-9620 i hours - A : them. zenship. The navy says “soon, but| Will fly it at average speeds, be- |trian club were announced today : re most | HAIR DYES—natural—"4* | il Work Guaranteed a o He Ji most fraporbn} not yet.” The economics of native| low 500 m. p. h. in the initial by Joseph Banas, Scting President. : | 4 es visite n a survey oO : te / . ' $ ir taper 7 leh Somee? $9.95 | eis “orn hoist ese cnr “save an ea Jo Ann Brandt, Dolores Douge : Worth many times island shows the most evidence| ., « of military government c ial © oeidiary. of Barbara Suits, Lawrence Sweeney, i ons you this low price. of progress in educating, housing,|qG ams government is civil. i Posi 0 2 SU ry Joan Sheppard, Betty Billeter, Lynn i » insur. ; and feeding the natives. N ry Truk school for training military gov- Brown, Marnita Dietrich, Deniese : lusively CTR TE] SOLD WAVES $ 50 Bsewhere, the naty seems lo be Jup Mwmvts . | ery t office has n set ho t Thom, Peli McGeary, Betty 1 ; of MUTE TUTTI] me rE * on the right track, but as yet| The Guamanians like the present | Srnmen ers en set Up ati npaywell, Jane Dillon, Geraldine pany o Looks like naturally producing only spotty results. way the navy is running the show, Stanford. Harman, Joan Dunn, Alfred Samp- 4 ur pas- curly hair. Saipan was governed by the Japs but they have seen other navy ad- Not Easy to Blueprint er and Mr. Sands, all of Indianap- i : _— las a mandate between the end of |ministrations, and their spokesmen | But the navy is finding it's not (olis; Elizabeth Fendig, Renssalaer; ‘ |world war I and the U. S. invasion. |are suspicious of what might come as easy to blueprint the way of life Shirley Loy, Carmel, and Patricia The frat 4-engine service of But the native children are sing- |later. for a native and put it into effect Botkin, Tulsa, Okla. ony airline, for Indienopolis. . ” ing “God Bless America” with a| In the Marshalls, when a navy as it is to make a PT-boat. from a Ad # te . : : | vertisement y IF Peter. Pain PUMMELS No.1! eViEat| | discernible ring of sincerity. ship looms up on the horizon, the blueprint, %

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Here, in the making, is an All-American section crew. From a traveling sound screen, they are picking up pointers on railroading, just as a football team takes on championship polish from its coach.

This is one of 800 traveling campus meetings being held along 6,600 miles of Illinois Central Railroad — meetings suggested by, the men, themselves, to teach safer, easier, better ways of doing their jobs.

In several states, other Illinois Central workers are attending specially arranged university extension courses.

These “railroad campus’ activities, and others, stem from the Illinois Central's conviction that modern - railroading demands the finest in men—and women —as well as the best of equipment. Together they are the heart and sinew of the Illinois Central's promise to bring you transportation second to none,

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+ W. A. JOHNSTON, President

Get More Freedom natives rush out to sing their wel-

Saipan’s mayor, a Chamorran named Elias Sablan who wen that post in a free election, says his people are happy under navy govlernment; the big difference, he explains, is that they get more freedom than the Japs gave them. About 100 miles to the south is Guam. With Saipan, the navy wants to make it the focal point of its defense plan. But while America has run Guam since 1898 except for Jap interruption during

line, But on Truk, when you ask a native “who is number one, Amerfcan or Jap?” the answer (when a navy officer isn't around to hear) |is “Jap number one.” And on Pellelieu the lack of officers and supplies has kept .the navy from making any start toward running the natives. On the islands where there was { war damage, the U. S. is supplying {up to 60 per cent of the food for {the natives.

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come and form a long reception dominated and run by the Jap | First

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| ferent story.

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{was some exploitation of the na- | tives, but the natives didn't mind it.

An educated native on Okinawa to give them a visit to the United people were States

They have found, he

It calls for schools and hos-! of living. The navy has adopted a

omies. The navy sets all wage scales | ow : ervihing is ch Me siscks witholl He benefit vou y re. 4 | new comes in everything is c anged | ghive Irom» Pp! Btion called anything else the natives have to sell and sets a price on everything g | But we also like our way of doing

| Much’ of this work is being done in | things and living. | close co-operation with the U. 8.|

You May Never Suffer Another -A few of the Islands are selt- |

| sufficient; but on most of them you | |see few natives who aren't wearing and the chiefs were rewarded by

some article of American G. I. all-expense tours of Japan and | Tokyo.

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The natives who were on Islands

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The navy is finding many of the | Jap's methods of native govern-| ment to be sound. The Japanese | policy of sending out famiiies to live | these islands permanently | worked out extremely well. There

Want to See Washington The natives who worked hardest

This pleased the natives. They keep asking when the navy is going

They want to see Washington. The navy is obviously trying to give these natives good government. !————

But the native philosophy goes beyond that. The statement of one si chieftain on Majuro in the Marshalls is significant: } hi I “In mine and my father's genera- | oug asy dy tion we have been ruled by four. Coughing, gasping, w . different countries, the Spanish, avtacs of Broneiial Asthma ran your sieeh

energy because you can’t get air in and Germans, Japanese and now the out of your lungs properly. But now it is no Americans.

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Steer is used in making most of the things you buy—from paper clipsto auto-

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Higher labor and other costs have pushed up the price of almost everything you buy. But steel has gone up mugh less than most other products.

Since 1939 steel prices have risen less than 18 per cent,” compared with 44 per

cent* for consumers’ prices generally, | At an average price of only three cents

a pound, steel is the lowest priced of all the metals.

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Steel is your best bargain:

Figures from U. 8, Bureau of Labor Statistios

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350 Fifth Avenne, New York I, NY.

Get the Facts, Write today for your free copy of "Steel—Pacemaker for Peacetime.”

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