Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 25 February 1947 — Page 13

be a real civil it failing that, ments or oblinot a charge ditions haven't

® ave their coun- , Russia. and a personn idealist himsecutive, he apre can build a ° as shown how: patronage and and decentral- :

ent believer in ’ enterprise has " der stimulation thal. Business is a threat to 3 & demonstrat ownership in ise In its right

ir free order at communism at keep this free _ 3 and scientists opportunity to ls are building

lity to - inspire ving proof that put sacrifice of

ly a stabilizing to preserve our liberals, should

1852

men to become b of Vermont, aris C. Dunning yvernors of the . ators also came obert Hanna of

Jirginia. . a touch of the , in the mixing >» good Hoosiers. itive of the very fair. This fair « ym politics and nd business, as anything to do

y essence of all may be broadly ' Indiana people. jerts who follow They grade the flerent, tops of

ina state fair is It was held in

2, 1852. It had - including farm . front,

owed an ear of helled 1.3 quarts

t in Indiana life Indiana.

Bases:

the price, Japan Lake Baikal and time when such t in Europe. blood and trea~ nchuria, S8akhaw Zealand, the ce's Far Eastern e. without United [ responsible for time. To do so, erate. of course, was Roosevelt, meant the Aleutians in ve other bases,” Hawall. And the the defense of dexico down past down to Chile.” any possessions m confident the us in protection inery to prevent

nds were a vital

gression against ore United Na

ery, “to prevent y United, Nations 8. will have no nds for its om emisphers.

ei me ri ao

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| *icebreaker was to be used in the

Re

THE WEATHER FOTOCAST:. ACME ELePrOTS | i

197 Men, 29 Dogs Go; ‘Much Equipment Left; Tiny Ship Fights Freeze

Plans for Expedition in Next Polar Summer Already Being Discussed

By FRED SPARKS Times Special Writer’

ABOARD THE U. 8. 8. BURTON ISLAND, Feb. 25.—~Now we're on our way Home. After one montii at the chilly tent camp called Little America, the ice breaker Burton Island evacuated our party of 187 men

and 29 dogs. We sailed out of the Bay of Whales early yesterday. WAL a x \/ 5 The mile and three-quarters from the camp site to the edge of the ae tory WORTH A, LINE sahaeery . 1 - aans ice, where the Burton Island was moored, looked like a painting of Na- PARTY CLOUDY "a Sedesi FREE tones dill AL poleon’s retreat from Moscow. SAN ani 2.88 ; It was a hasty evacuation, ddys , NID ¢ - NEW ORLEANS » ahead of the date set by Rear Adm. | June Peak Seen RQ Richard E. Byrd. i Tom FOTOEAST - ' canned peathes » ATTERED AFFECTED to propellers were | In Cost of Living owNsvILLE o scare i) a ~ strewn around to DRIZZLE ow wae SNOW facilitate the by \ SNOW SHOWERS [ : treat. | Worst fo Come, 1) AND URRIES (L244 "AN And retreat W Economists Say TM REG PAT'S PEND COPR 1947 COW. L. A WAGNER ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. . was. Reconnais. | ; » pg agl pt : : : sance had indi-| WASHINGTON, Feb. 25 (U. P.). NATIONAL 24-HOUR FORE- Fog will blanket the entire Pa-. lanta, Memphis, Kansas City and

CAST SUMMARY: Little change will take place in the appearance of the Fotocast map in-the next 24 hours. Pressure will gradually equalize as the low cell in the northeast fills. Contrary to the usual picture | mild air continues to flow south- |

' Washington 24; Philadelphia, Detroit and Cleveland 22; St. Louis 25; Milwaukee 16; Ft. Worth 30; Duluth and Bismarck § and from 40 to 43 along the Pacific coast. Shippers should protect goods for indicated temperatures or lower | in these areas.

cific coastal region. Minimum temperatures will be 32 tomorrow along the freezing line on the Fotdcast, Still lower temperatures will be recorded north of this line. . Forecast minimum readings include Boston 26; New York, Ate

cited that the _goysewives will be paying $1 a 750-miles of ice pound for some pork cuts within pack in the ROSS two weeks and living costs will soar sea—~from the iy, new high by the end of June,

Mr. Sparks Bay of Whales to the clear Pacific ;; was predicted today.

waters—was freezing tighter every, The news that the worst is yet hour. [to come in food prices came from Delay might have meant & Win- japhor and agriculture department

PAIVIEW of U.S. WIATHIR BUREAU. OLPY. of COMMERCE FORECAST PERIOD ENDING 730AMm 151 2:26 o

At Miami Beach Cancel Time Off; $186,000 Loot

MIAMI] BEACH, Fla, Feb, 26 (U. P.). ~— Miami Beach police were placed on a seven-day work week today in an effort to protect rich winter visitors from gunmen. Armed thieves have taken se.-| 000 in three daring strikes over the | week-end. Police Chief Albert Simpson cane celléd .all-time off for department members. He appealed to rich women tourists to leave their gems ‘at home! when they go to gambling casinos or nightclubs, The veteran police officer warned | that the bandits are spotting their victims in the lush supper clubs and casinos. Meanwhile, one of the week-end | victims, Songstress Sophie Tucker,

turn, $75,000 in platinum and diamond jewelry. It was taken from the Beachcomber night club along with $16,000 in club receipts, Miss Tucker pointed to the numerous prison appearances she had made. She expressed the Belief that the three masked gunmen would return her gems when they found | out who owned them. The Beachcomber holdup was one

{ for Uglyman.

was hopeful that thieves would re-+

{full swing.

: CONTEST N Marge - Hartley and Buddy Crabb’ were named winners of the Bluebelle-Uglyman annual” contest, at the dance sponsored by the Student Board held in the Shortridge g gym Sat urday night. Runners-up in’ the contest for Bluebelle were Nancy Howey and Billi Eiff. Bob Wade and J. B. King were second and third place winners

of three within a 24-hour period, In other strikes, thieves took $20,000 from a restaurant, safe and, 575,000 worth’ of jewéls from the | the cards. . hotel rooms of a Texas couple. | The other 54.000 have until The February toll from robberies day midnight to get their reg was estimated by police at nearly .ion cards in the mail. After th $300,000. date, the disqualified voters The migration of crooks nere usu- have to go down to the basement ally starts_in December whe: the the court house fo re- i ne 120-day racing season begins and sonally before Avell & the winter tourist trade gets. into be eligible to vote in maries May 6.

| ward from Canada into the lower Lakes region. Cold air will penetrate the Plains states as it swings around a high pressure cell in western Canada. Tem-

ter at Little America. We were | sources and livestock experts. Hog * neither physically nor morally | prices equaled the all-time U, 8S. ready for such an ordeal. ‘high of $30 per hundredweight at We had had our taste of cold—30 the Chicago stogkyards. below, with blizzard winds reaching | Chicago livestock men predicted 50 miles an hour. |$1-a-pound pork in two weeks. And| peratures from the Mississippi to We did not desire to sample more (government sources pointed to sky- the Great Divide will remain ‘which in the Antarctic winter rocketing hog, grain and cotton| relatively low as this cold air night now beginning would reach [prices to back up their prediction) forces its way as far south as the 80 below. |that the worst still lies ahead, Gulf states. (Large open air The order to evacuate was given, The labor department reported | mass arrows on the Fotocast after Adm. Byrd consulted with|meanwhile that on ‘Jan. 15 retail] show path of this air.) Rear Adm. Richard E. Cruzen, task|food prices were 30 per cent higher| Lower readings will also be exforce commander, aboard the Bur-|{than on the corresponding date a| perienced in the far west as cool ton Island shortly after its arrivaliyear earlier, .| air flows down the slopes of the BE ve wor 0 ne 1 5 rT em to | Be 8 el hours. That meant lots of things, CE pec. 15, b JRF Sel ower Nester Montana tonight and tob be pasied xd even more "8! this one-month drop would be only Im: EN a Pistured for he Mountains of gear were ~ jets temporary. Retail prices already] woop ;0 “gp oy stowers will bo h ite. for have begun to rise, helped by a netel in th strewn around the camp site, ho sharp increase, in wholesale prices ge n e central Rockies, other reasons besides our hasty de- which began late last month. The Xe Seah Plains, the Lakes reparture. v3 uot h wholesale increase is soon expected gon 3 44 Tay ner New JThere amoy le tok enough 100 "push etal prices even bgher, | ZK tnd New Engin. (se b little bigger Te seagoing Hier Agriculture spokesmen predict the consiierapic iy ovat, Besides, most of the gear is sur. (food price level soon will Surpass) oo 0 tne areas of Peoria plus war property and it would cost | the December peak. They believe] gi. oy; be clear over the midmore to haul it to the states than|Prices will not begin to fall before) gio ang sou Atlantic states, the it’s worth. late SprLg or early summer at the| gq, states, southern New Mex- ’ soone. ico, Washi n, Oregon, , Ghost “Towa. Que” Move Food to Continue Rise gale, So Little America reverts back 10, 1, 1 ,; wepartment source pre-| (See partly cloudy and cloudy Its original status as a ghost toWD—| ji.i0q the food price rise would| Areas map.) the lonesomest, most isolated ghost| probakly continue through June. Offici town in the world. P price’ xperts said heavy Easter de- cial Weather " To will| mand and the shortage caused by| UNITED STATES WEATHER BUREAU rr ve Sobol The Antarctic the heavy hog slaughter last July To. is as free of them as it is of man.|and August during the OPA lapse| Sunrise ...... 6:25 | Sunset Should some wandering band|contribute to the new record IOr|pricipiation 2¢ hrs. ending 730 a.m. .04

seek a well-stocked haven, they hogs. Total precipitation - since Jan. 1 ... 4.19 are invited to investigate . Little] Cotton also soared again today, Deficiency since Jan. 1.............. 1.17 going above $440 a bale. Wheat

4s TE

ls 4 §

-

“lock BOOKSHOP Saiki

vright, 1947, by The Indianapolis Times ~ €°P%ind ‘The Chicago Daily News, Inc, LDIOTY

America. Ie The following ables shows the temperaThere they will find enough food (sold as high as $2.00; cents ajiure in other cities: High Low to keep 200 men more than a year.|bushel,. highest in thirty years at/RCaCi. ......c.ooooooon- 53 3 Due to subzero weather the meat Chicago, and corn reached highs for Chicago fee ioe i 2 BCINNAIL ...ce0cvvvicvnnnees will be as fresh as the day it was, 1947. Cleveland ... C2 2 sliced, and the butter as tasty as : Denver Looney : the day it was churned. . HR. Fay VO ae ryriionrin 2 If clothes are needed they can A att Retired Indianapolis ic ee u get them from the storeroom. 88s % $ -l 130 NE ee 80 51 Enough parkas, mittens, long red I Ne 70 45 underwear, mukluks, socks, and face | =H : Minneapolis-St. Paul .. 1 masks are stored there to keep a n ll fia | eS New York 25 man warm for 1000 years. Skishoms . City it Eight Planes Left VENTNOR, N. J. Feb. 25 (U. P). Sun Anionic vaaett at Should our mythical visitors de-|_Hugh A. Galt, 79, Akron, O., re- CARAT ¥ 3 523 i or - N ? by 908 § Anno 0, ReLictox 2 sire air transportation, if they have ireq industrialist, died at his sum- |" "" I mach hapirg he . eT religion in modern lifes, by one

the know-how they can try any one|mer home here last night of pneuof eight planes anchored to the !monia. fice. Mr. Galt, former vice president

Thgre are the six transport planes of He FInSorgh Plats Glass io used to photograph a large part of [came here three weeks ago the continent, one ski plane and 1g a 10-day illness at his Akron “ » ome. Buy Smal) “etasshoppe 2 ols is the A native of Scotland, he came to property of the United States gov-|tN® United States when he was 21 ernment, and signs to that effect years old. His first job was with have been posted. Harrison & Co., Philadelphia chemThe U. 8. government, or its army ists. At the turn of the century, he or navy might well make use of the|became first president of the South- table. a Sn food and gear next year. Study of|'R Alkali Corp, Corpus Christi,| Mrs. Alexander said she eoucn the Antarctic in the polar summar | +X: eat pork chops and.needed vegeof 1047-1948 is already being] Mr: Galt constructed the first tables but that her husband insisted lanned caustic soda plants in Michigan, |in having little else but pork chops. panner. Ohio and Texas. In 1920 he became | The divorce wasn't granted enDogs Are Saved vice president of the Pittsburgh |tirely on the grounds of too many Talking about dogs, the huskies Plate Glass Co. retiring in 1941. |chops, Judge Niblack said. Her that helped transport man and ma- Since his retirement he and his wife [testimony accused her husband of chine around Little America were|lived at Braeside, their Akron home. | “drinking too much” and non-sup-a touchy subject for days port.

Chief Robert Johnson, the dogs Byrnes to Testify

. He is survived also by §. daughter, ; ' Mrs. C. Middleton of jon master, was the most dejected chap ‘On Satellite Treaties

when he first learned that only one Elizabeth Jordan, WASHINGTON, Feb. 25 (U. P).

evacuation. He recalled a previous Author, Journalist, Dies | —Former Secretary of State James

expedition when space hmstations| NEW YORK Feb. 25 (U. P.). — pesulted. in blowing up the dogs Hke |Elizabeth Jordan, 79, author and|F. Byrnes has agreed to go before AR-enemy bridge. " journalist, died yesterday at her |the senate foreign relations com“How can 1 do IW? moaned Chief home after a brief illness. mittee to urge ratification of the gohnson. “1 bring these poor dogs Miss Jordan worked for the St.[axis and satellite peace treaties down from New Hampshire without|,. \"Giohe the Chicago Tribune [which he negotiated. Mr. Byrnes, after a meeting with

Mrs. Nellie M. Alexander

Is Granted Divorce Mrs. Nellie May Alexander, 56, was granted a divorce ‘by Judge John L. Niblack in superior court 1 yesterday after she testified that her husband, Henry, 60, purchased too many pork chops and not enough vegetables for the family

jEking Shem. And. now 1 might and the New York World before| . Tave to set on some Synainiie Ha becoming editor of Harper's Bazaar | President Truman late yesterday, der them. Ill never be able to 190% |, 1900 prom 1843 to 1918 she was|revealed that he had been asked to Rhone dog square in te eve la literary adviser to Harper & |make the appearance by CommitRo i. 1 Brothers. tee Chairman Arthur H. VandenAt the very last minute 1 W83| ‘gor last novel, “Mrs. Warren's|berg (R. Mich) and Secretary of Gecided to crowd this erowded Ves; (gq, was published in 1044. State George C. Marshall.

sel just a bit more. Like a governor's aid carrying a > . . ] Receptionist Delays Note, Stirs Up Russ-U. S. Crisis’

reprieve for a condemned prisoner, Omdr. Scotty Campbell,” who was the explanation was ‘not convinc-

mayor of Little America, told Chief Johnson he could bring the dogs back by housing them on the. fantail of the ice breaker. It was a happy moment for Chief Johnson and .all hands.

Work Around Clock

Bags were packed all Saturday night and the half-frozen ground crew worked around the elock anchoring the planes to the ice. Unknowingly she headed off a Slowly, a thin line of .men |p) note from Russia and state straggled gingerly over YAWning|qenartment higher-ups didn’t get it crevasses to the ship and climbed |, 4i] several days later. aboard the slippery gangplank. The mixup went back to UnderShortly before midnight Adm. secretary of State Dean Acheson's Byrd got out of a weasel alongside |reyjark before a congressional comthe ship and took one more look mittee that Russian foreign policy at the tent city atop the barrier. wag “aggressive and expanding.” Then he went to his cabin. In response to a Russian protest, The fo Byrd Antarctic expe-(gecretary of State George C. Mardition was over. shall sent a note explaining the reAhead was the struggle through mark, “Then the Russians an-

WASHINGTON, Feb. 25 (U. P.).— She wasn’t aware of it, but a lady receptionist at the state department almost got the United States and Russia involved in another argument.

That note, the state department said it never had received. The Russian embassy said it was too received; that it-was delivered to the department by special messenger last Friday and duly accepted. ' The state department checked. Its Russian experts, who usually get such notes by cable or diplomatic courier, said they hadn't seenyit. Finally it was learned that the note had come to the receptionist who, because it was in Russian and she couldn't read Russian, sent it to the translation branch for routine handling. . JLast night #.was, found at the bottom of a big stack of unim-

the ice pack—and home. d in Moscow that they had d the v8 Sve: Shas

Postans ‘documents Svalting wa.

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