Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 18 February 1948 — Page 3

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ANGOON. Alaska Feb. _| The radio-telephone is one of to pay ‘various : $4 = |The Salvation Ariny has gone io|the Most important parts of the boat—some others | LL — sea. : > : 3 ship because it will be doing res-|cabin, thé radio, the planking, ! < : Its “navy” consists of a canoe cue work along distant Alaskan! the chapel, ete. ’ 2 : in Australia, a barge in the Seine waterways, a Then the Taku — built for a - ° at Paris, the trim little sea-going It has taken two years and! multi-millionaire--was offered to . a : cruiser, “Salvo,” in the South Pa- thousands of pennies — $30,000 the Army for $30,000, a price recific, the “Phoebe” plying the worth — from Sunday school | duced from its real value “as a canals in Holland, |and the “Cath- children to get the Salvation mark of interest in the Army's 1" erine Booth,” a familiar sight in Army's Alaskan “fleet” in oper- work.” pe is Norway's fjords. ation. : . “| It could carry 30 passengers on » . But the pride of the fleet is Brigadier Chester Taylor, Sal- short trips and accommodate 20 " here — the “William Booth.” a vationist commander in Juneau, overnight. = ol - § | TT BR To0t twin-screw diesel” cabin decided in 1946 that the Army's] Patrick Paul of AnNgoon, an ext | ' cruiser with stove, stainless steel work here was hampered because pert marine naviga r Kansas City : : Pei sinks, an electric refrigerator it couldn't reach isolated villages. and a Salvationist, is skipper of Le] i : 3 Opinions Spt srned, system, a deep freeze unit, show- He asked for a boat which would the now “renamed “Willlam Held ‘Misconstrued’ « i ers and lavatories and: a five- cost $20.000 to build. Booth” and the queen of the JIM G. LUCAS i Correspondent Says {channel ship-to-shore - radio-tele-. Sunday school students in the fleet is on its first Alaskan misBy “Howard Staff Writer By FRED SPARKS phone. 'U, 8. and Alaska banded together! sion, ’ ed “Times Foreign C dent a / WASHINGTON, Feb 18 The WITH GREEK COM ® 5 T hite th Velo to fight for the Tuwe TROOPS IN THE FIELD, Near tmmune conte] military training. vill | |Kastoria, Feb. 18—"This is ine| il are ne universa ecommendation of he - toughest assignment--peace or . - & ¥¥W council on administration or handed Yo an. Amani Shea 55 TRADITION WITH A TOUCH OF TOMORROW! ied back to % |can officer.” | SAYS: : ghat Xt be sent | A Ained That is the joint sentiment of | : . ~riBervices. tee, 8 YEW lead Maj. Morrett— Sexton and Capt. a or said today. Be af Leroy Welch, two Americans ax- " .. Edwin K, Inman, a member o signed to this Greek mountain eo VFW National Legislative division as it participates in the| - th . { particip n th ice every six Committee, said the Sowneil's nes latest campaign to rid Greece's = ihe country and get il - tion at Kansas City this week had Albanian border of guerrillas. been “misconstrued. ro i i I have marched into battle with | He said its recommendation these ‘lads to within killing dis-| + ~ ‘was “based on information fur- tance of unfriendly Albania and v » .nished us on an off-the-tecord| ‘I heartily indorse their senti-| pas i anit Sng only are these boys sub. | 2 Towe to be voted on at this ses- ject to living conditions that sion of Congresf Zande BEDTIME : Acme: Telephoto. Make a shoep ap look Hike wad, y Van Zandi Ris x , . +l. ine ern plumbing; they are charge Ap ne emation] a. TIME STORY. Bingo, an alert young lioness: of the Hamid-Morton Shrine eg hy Art Charged was supplied by Rep. James E, Circus, just can't go to sleep at night without a story from Mother Goose, so her [sensitive Greeks with kid gloves Van Zandt (R. Pa.), former Yrw trainer, Dick Clemens, reads to her in his room at a Memphis hotel. Bingo will take |—like Jal-wearing diplomats. e - ’ 4 . . . . nher re rmy rent of universal mii part in a Shrine benefit show for crippled c hildren. ls We Americans have inherited] tary training. . Pr i 1h. TAN {a very poor and tired nephew— | % “We voted to strengthen the Dale Steed Joins | [the Greek Army. Our job is wi { bill and put some teeth in it,” Mr. . . Ww Il A i {show the little scamp the modern bt “ 's- all we n-! { \ | American way of war. We can Toman sad Tuaty > - . i ells gency . . toss in our 2 cents at will, but, iva wea. tan 2 OFS IN Australia ooo soc ame ue n New History [5 asin 2a. 5 ES tin which “requested” {tative here for more than 20 often do, turn us down as flat as {hat the Towe bill be sent bak] : i |years, has joined Wells & Co. an Sndeinoutismd Rounder ‘ . to committee ns order svat its Trade Regulations Due general insurance agency in the 4-Volume Work cold Mother ‘Barth hig gue 2 an na uacies| eae IL | \ . { ee. yemoved’—but that he, TO Benefit British > iinois Pulling! Being Completed | machine-gun bullets fanned the! - plans to go ahead now with .lans| By FRED HUBBARD ‘manager. By KEYES BEECH ja ES. clo asiied. the: Greek tc force a vote in this Congress. Times Foreign Writer aie Mr. Steed has Times Foreign Writer vattalion. Commander bow Ome . Plans Conference ! SYDNEY, Australia, Feb, 18 | been associated! TOKYO, Japan, Feb. 18 — A 11 rey keep pushing and smash IT's FROM : . Mr. Inman said he had arranged While American cars are still out-| with two’ insur- 350,000-word history of ihe Pa- that Sn eer Lim ) : ; : vin gon Tat Sn a Pe Taio Sos Br nde cmon Span who Gon 1% Comat a be 0 not THE MAN'S STORE Aerie ., |expect, bo as ef. under- . jé Care to risk casualties. ’ ; tive committees in Washing*on when the full force of Common- writer and for | MacArthur in the starring role, Maj. Sexton logically remarked next week when they will plan a wealth restrictions on dollar-area | four years was hasbeen In preparation here fori to io 0, Odd (ee any joint eamipaidn force the Towe imports is felt. | rating engineer| ore than a Jeary. And the end| = P AND I) bill out ‘of the rules committee. car- : with the -Ohio|is not yet in sight. ° : : ' He said’ the meeting ‘of the ortady, the al hungry public SR Inspection Bu. Product of many minds, this Spurns Advice ; ord from Britain Ts ) | : isct!| ~The commander, need you be council of administration ‘n Kan-|1.¢ 27 000 d 13.000 truck v reau, Cleveland. 4-volume unique literary .project City was an executive Session, | cr accie nro non lon oy truck Steed Recently he is under the direction of Maj, told, did not like this crack—even sas City : ''chassis are scheduled for ship-| r. ; y I : from a Tepresentative of big. but that he had planned to ‘tell has bee | Gen, Charles A. Willoughby, Mac- p ig ut that ha Plann **%iment to Australia in 1948 as well as Nn 2880 ST yelp officer Strong, rich uncle, ‘ en “ Legion chiefs about the resolution las 20.000 completed cars “if re- ciated with Cooling, Grumme, Arthur’s intelligence officer of he tiem? spn og recommending that the Towe bill gireqw ~~~ Mumford Co, Inc, as War, as-editor-In-. Ou see (Oe probem: 1 0 be sent back for strengthening 4 : underwriter, chief. Suppose you are commanding » “Unl i| John 8. Strong, Australian rep- : Those associated with the pre- Officer of an army unit and a for- ' nless I am definitely ordered " } not to do 0,” he said, “I shail resentative of the Society of Mo- ‘PREFAB’ HOMES GAIN | paration of the history have been eigner is detailed to ride with you 2 A go into the meeting with the Le. tor Manufacturers and Traders, Approximately 70,000 new per- cautioned against discussing it —particularly one of lower rank. - gion to work out any plan pos- who announced the good news, manent factory-built homes of With correspondents for fear it Every few minutes he asks you a sible to get universal military also promises 57,000 car chassis the so-called prefabricated type Will be used as political ammuni- for your innermost thoughts 3 ? training enacted at this session of fOr next year. ° were erected in America during tion against Gen. MacArthur, even suggests his own methods. Congress.” Copyright ingiagagalis Times and Chicago ,, t two years. Release Date Changed { But it won't be all Alphonse| * gress. Daly News. Jas jeans. Volume I was originally sched- and Gaston friendship waltz. : ; “aig a a uled to be released in June. Some After all, the misery of Anzio — ; : . persons professed to see political/and the hell of Iwo Jima were CES) STRAUSS SAYS ‘TRADITION WITH * | significance in this date, since not he graduate School of a Pine : \ | June is the month of the Repub- tea diploma! eve s tA TOUCH OF TOMORROW! lican National Convention. What- above-board, straight - from - the- | ? ever the reason, publication has shoulder American approach is now been postponed until sum- just what the doctor ordered for er. {the Greeks, - . yp how many War Depart-| Who Blames Them? ‘| ment civilians are .employed on! It might push them info ending, — ele the project is difficult to deter-ithis civil war which is costing us. mine. However, at least 20 have plenty of chips, folding money. } : been working on Vol. I alone. But it is civil war—Greeks hate | > Willoustby J2_unable_to say and kill Greeks—who can biame RED AND BLUE : when the pro w com- them? pleted. The Greeks play with this battle GREEN AND BROWN p > 4 : | : : le as if they were fighting a big-time ORANGE AND BROWN ] : army with frontline trenches; 0xas 0 S ut commando posts, communiques, SIZES r . J tc. “They are fighting in small 10 tb 2 groups of desperadoes. The Yanks * : ‘hope soon to change their apor 0 : 0 ar proach — diplomacy, politics and % {baby-kissing be damned. : ' By PAUL S. KOTIGBAK v Another thing that Anpeied the ONE OF 5 i ; Times Foreign Correspondent — 2 as 5 ack of security. “ W MANIEA, P. I, Feb. 18—Presi- Three days before. our campaign AMERICA'S - dent Roxas apparently is out to was launched, officials in Kastoria ii see that the Philippine Surplus told reporters it would flop like FINE 3 18. Commission makes its $100 mil- burlesque comedians prat fall : lion, and no less. : 3 EVerybodYy Je Sapained. Jciugs SHOPS R L Arsenio N. Luz, commission ing Gen. Markos’ grandmother, : = 3 ; 5 chairman, ‘recently © announced knew the plans for the forthcom- FOR } ed : . : ’ : that he had set that goal for pro- ing mountain-push. : BOY a. : > w : __— a : : ceeds from sales of war goods It is as as easy to keep a Greek . Ss: B I p ; SHIT on hand In’ VArious parts or quiet as Tt woilld be to gag alt the AND Le . the islands. Under a speed-up radios in Chicago. To install re- oe i : ” ; Tu wed plan he hoped to dispose of them spect for secrecy into the Greek STUDENTS 3 . j within six, or eight, months,. at Army which moves cross country ~ rR Lo. most. ) like a traveling ciféus, minus only } FOURTH- i: | —— - fails Who Makes tinerieas—— re ep 8 CY Boy ne accepted, four-color posters, is- just one : f : (Who Makes Anieriea s fom # Liasih Fi, & S500 or Func Tor The YaRRE 66 TLOOR PA Famous Fleece Coat—The ALPAGORA) But Roxas has now disapproved Copyright Indianapolis Times and Chicago ! * : » of it. Luz claims that the goods ssa— : comprise “deteriorated supplies” ROAD. PAINT TOUGH > 3h : ; u 4 HAS PUT HIS. and besides, ft was the only bid -Special paints ‘are used for KAYNEE—America's fine tailor in : 7 and “there was nothing else to traffic markings on highways to| . do ‘but accept it.” withstand the severe treatment| the field of shirts* for the Not so fast, says Roxas. Bo by automobile, truck and bus tal eki : RESOURCES AND Luz must wait for a higher bid, wheels in both hot and cold students uses special skills ; ce fl fefurdieis of his disposs) time-| weather. Zinc oxide and zinc sul-| n loperfion cutting, 3 d table. : ‘ a ¢ » t ively | h! . » RR » KNOW HOW INTO THE : Copyright Indianapolis Times ind Chicago fae wre used extensively in suc ta ring and finishing shirts - : ily Ne ~ Se Loken Aa bans + : : B - $ in E Is Severe ~that young. men are happier in— “ FIELD OF rivain Xpeci ro : And now KAYNEE comes forth = - — . . - . v ~w \ [Economic Crisis in Spring with s Calioriis styied =~ o* : : i ei sport shirt—that is apt to be GABARDINE Wil. Drain Reserves When $3.8 Billion No | on the Soy ond : A x . . a \ ‘ _— a U.S. Loan Is Spent; Tories Lash at Labor - later) Scene — TOPCOATS By ERNIE HILL, Times Foreign Correspondent v { hy - i i - ie » LONDON, Feb. 18 Britain is expecting a severe economlie It's fine Sanforized cotton yx — crisis within the next 90 days. ) s : At least that seems to be the explanation of all the speeches of Gabardin turdily woven and \ fd q incrimination, castigation, self-defense and old-world gloom being ; doris, oe AND THE RESULTS ode

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{heard in this country today. | The $2.8 billion United States |Marshall aid may still be in the {air.. Britain will be dipping into {its 1ast 2 billion in dollars and [gold reserves. ~ Britain expects to find itself unable to buy from the U. 8. Canada and other. non-sterling countries by spring. - 5 Unleashes Attack looking ahead Winston Churchill has unleashed new at- . {tacks against thé Socialist government. ‘The Tories have decided that now is the time to strike.

“The _planners” says Mr. Churchill, “have miscalculated and mismanaged everything they ;' {have touched. They Keep “the {British bulldog running around after his own tail till he is dizzy, and then wonder that he cannet keep the wolf from the door.” Sir Stafford Cripps, aware that “ spring will be rough, has an- : [nounced that wages must be . pegged at current levels and that goods on the market must remain at present prices. He is |working out a“program of volun-' tary compliance, on the U. 8. to help for the néxt |' The weekly economic maga- Wo to four years... ws ‘zine, Time and Tide, sizes up, CoPyTiaht Indianapolis Ties and

loan will be gone ‘by May.

Y Cripps’ program in a front-cover editorial, thus: |

| “An occupational disease of politicians is the habit of posing a problem with the grand air of having thereby solved it. The! turgid white paper,” issued last week as a statement of personal incomes, costs and prices, boils down to this: |

“If inflation doesn’t stop, it will. go on. Over to you, chum.'” The Socialist government, still maintaining the vast popular sup-| port of the mass of Britons. is in! serious trouble and its leadership knows it. . { Recently’ Britain's trade unions ‘demanded pay increases for about 6 million workers. But Sir Stafford’s appeal to- the trades! union congress was weighed and | accepted. ]

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