Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 14 May 1948 — Page 2
4
Ee .
and Blood Still Flows
«Allenby Broke 5 Centuries of Turkish Rule; 5 OS Hatred reds in Palestine Go Buck to Bible Days
continue to be written in blood. In the midst of the Jewish sabbath, as British rule ended,
" Palestinean coast as soon as
< tine stems from Biblical days. | The Peel commission, sent by
ree SUM years-of Turkish. rule in Pa) tine.
long a question of military strat. . ogy alone.
“ declaration. Arabs, who - ought ria ship of Col. T. E. Lawrence, famed
: This shift from military rule to League
Ee IRE
y British i in ey Tod
By LARRY STILLERMAN The British. colonial office today closed the book of bloodpages recording Britain's stormy 30-year rule of Palestine, But the current history of the Holy Land, it appears, will
King ah of TransJordan was poised to invade Palestine with his Ara h and the Syrian tional home” Jews flocked to reAHR Lebanese 3 rom th lal ‘and ti the desert. north. Egypt promises to join in a two-front attack from Suez Canal.
scitlements flourished. Arab and] Jewish communities prospered. Unconfirmed Jewish sources re<| Rut this agrarian rennaissance, port. that Haganah veterans,iwhich permitted the Jews to purfighting for the Jewish Btate chase the arid soil, was denounced which they contend already eX-/ phy the Arabs. And peace In the ists, will be. reinforced with arms Holy Land was far from being a and planes waiting to cross the reality.
British depart, UN Seems Helpless Jews increased. The Meanwhile, the United Nations, flayed the British for ote laboring between partition and {the explosion of antagonisms.” trusteeship, seems helpless to halt! ttrictions of Jewish Tpuiigke the bloodshed. |at forming a legislative council Both the Arabs and Jews have was opposed hy the Jews. The indicated they will fight all “for-|iifting of immigration restrictions eign invaders.” {brought & further Moslem reThis strange fratricide in Pales- bellion in 1933.
but under the rule; which the the British in 1936; recommended |. British end tonight, the Arab-| partition, declaring the mandate Jewish antagonism appears to/ineffective. This was rejected by have grown. {both Jews and Arabs, although * The seemingly Iirreconcilablejlater .the : Zionists sought to differences between Jew and Ass negotiate for partition. in moon after Gen. Sir Ed- Final British Effort mund Allenby marched into Jeru- . The Woodhead commission folStlerh 1 Decersbet, 1911, Sading lowed in 1958, dismissed the idea partition, and of] ou in London between Arabs and Jews, However, the {Palestine Arabs refused to sit with the Jewish delegates “In May, 1939, the British in a final effort for “peace” foresaw . lan independent Palestine by 1949 under a plan to link the Holy Land with - British - through economic: treaties and a govern. ment run equally by Jews and Arabs, During the decade of transition, Jand sales to Jews. and immigration were to be restricted, After good relations. were established. W a constitution was. to be drafted 1d and the independent 8 state set up, This proposal was also denounced Ta ‘each of the opposing Tactions. Only Blood Will Tell More trouble ensued and the
Aimed primarily at safeguard-| ing approaches to the Suez Canal, Gen. Allenby’s conquest and oc cupation of ‘Palestine was al
Favored Jewish Home’ Yor Great Britain, before military victory in Palestine, issued
the famous Balfour Declaration which viewed “with favor the estonal home Tor the Jeviah Deo
lets tims inte tely urged the friftiation of the “promise” tn the
88 “Lawrence of Arabia” scored
and in 1022, the British “u colonial
Rich citrus farms grew. New :
COMMANDER — Philip N. | Kestner of Madison holds the | honor of newly-elected grand | commander of the Khights Templar of Jniane,
the “In 1020, the Moslems woven Kl g Tol ar {and riots between Arape nd}
Installs Officers
Kestner Fills Post
The Knights Templar of Indi-| ana announce the election and inistallation of Philip N. Kestner of Madison as grand commander and of EAWIR M. Démlow of ‘Tn-| dianapolis, to the position of grand captain of the guard. The elections took place at the! closing session of the 94th Annual
dery of Indiana in the Masonic Temple here yesterday. The grand captain of the guard stands in ihe ‘starting place. inthe official lin of the grand commandery.
Howard ¥. Christner of Elkhart,
“deputy grand commander; Don P,
Carpenter, Brazil, grand general.
_M. “Avery,
“Knightstown,| pr temo ”
Howe High to Crown Violet Queen at Dance
crowned queen
which will be held from 9
eivil rule encouraged the Nations Wad & sandals The
of over six an 2 A States Russia and England.
i
barren 10429 square miles ex welcomed Jewish Spurred by the promise of & “na- 1048, America
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immigration. partition plan. Then on Feb. 24, reversed its stand.
to soe them comfortably through school and the carsfide days fo follow.
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§ captured and two others escaped in a car after a hrief chase “here w 4 last night.
| place, i The suspect, held mporariivi EEE
1.95 su 570
lof cigarets stacked up at
As Grand Commander ins suipects two blocks away.
Conclave of the Grand Comman-|
Other officers elected include:
issimo; G. Max Fowler, Frankfort,
grand captain-general; George 8.| Parker, Anderson, grand treas- a ing. from the ‘cash urer; John = Boyd, Vincennes, oh grand recorder; Alf , Bragm, | o. 3 Hammond, grand senior warden; LONg Rest Faced Paul : Gv ey, - Washington, | ; ’ | grand Junior Faden; Charis Charles ¥. = By ry Whistles bearer; Sam ; ah, STand_standere ¥t.[ The Indizna “Alcoholic Bever-
ne, pris E aword bearer; Wil-
Rev. Guy 0. Carpantar was ap pointed as grand prelate.
One of five students will be at the]
Swing, annual Jultopper 5 12 o'clock tonight in the Howe School
Two Others Escape “After Brief Chase
"One ‘burglary = suspect Was
A police cruiser squad saw some one in the Gulf Service Bta-
tion, 1302 College Tri and sto to investiga! no man ransacking the,
lon a vagrancy charge, gave his name as Robert Elkins, 24, “of {1231 Bellefontaine Bt. Officers {sald the sus had 90 packages a window when they seized him, Two Men Escape Answering & burglary alarm, police a to the Bernard & Berkowitz Liquor Store, 902 W. Michigan St. early today and when they were within a block | of he place they saw two men run from the building, jump inte a car a speed away. Officers gave chase but lost the]
A hole had been bored through] the front door of ‘the store. The, {bit of their drill’ had struck the {burglar alarm wires, - | “Investigating a telephone call] {that “something was wrong” mat | [the Blue: Point Service Station, | officers found the station at-| tendant, Ray Miller, 23, of 220 E.| St. Joseph. 8t., locked In the rest room. Mr, Miller said that when he. {was locking up the station for *:the-night-a- man stuck -a-pistol in. {his back and demanded money. He said the bandit took his keys and locked him in a rest room, Police found the keys on the floor and liberated the victim,
The attendant said $35 or $40
age Commission warned Hoosiers |
55-hour drouth, when no beer of liquor will be sold, during Me-| morial Day week-end. A statement issued by the ABC said “The sale of alcoholic bev. | eragés will be fllegal between the
‘opening time Tuesday, June 1.” Liquor sales are banned on Sundays and holidays, and when |
Memorial Day will this year), | sales are barred on Monday also. | Opening time for Hoosier bars |
a holiday - falls on Sunday (as }}
_ and they close ot! 4 “using
8 ry Sispoct | ae
again today that they face “aff me
oc
hours of closing May 20,-and-the } . . @
BF ENT AS A
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wa time and prese head of the O fice of Defen Transportati o fervently quot statistics
Johnson,
prove His co! clusion that ti shortage « freight cars is tic peril contre day. His whole pc the time to get freight cars © be too late a of a new emerg will have to b ment, “We- ought. t« cation of steel he says. “We ng 15,000 to 17 instead - of the strainiag ever, duce.” 72,000 The governn tion expert poi 1942 until Tast 1 out more freig built. Last y: 72,000 cars ane “If we had b month beginni year,” he said, we would have as in 1946. An less than in 19 we had less tha on back to 19
Robert 8. Hes
of “the Associa!
Railroads, agre: son about the freight cars bi his state of ‘ala “I believe we ~now-than at th War I1,” he saic judge this thing picture.” He pointed ou
~~ ‘more freight is
railroads today
~.And_with 500.0
cars, Col. Johnson
of argument wi tion. He says
fas’ eight = to }
as eight stroke: par-shopter. “bl under par, “The railroad: “are shooting p is how long can ficiency. The tr roads have no serves, Everythi He said anoth quire more railr more men and n railroads need 6 cars and should added, thus Pp
“But at the pr duction, conside scrap between 5 month, it will to gef that n “And by that t will, be eight yi its “Phat means perpetual freigt The railroads freight cars an cars on order, n business for the ers and two ye the. passenger c Col. Johnson to -see about 8 and 5000 new P the railroads.
Why. Not. Family §
.. By DR. ERNES SE ——
Dressing Hi
How soon sho himself? We st of all, that a start undressing fore he can pull up trousers or I Soon after his f toddler will help though he may middle, By the he should be pre stripping job. more slowly.
or Jim shows | help himself, no leave the youn; his own, ‘One can help to help, I stil) our children wet Portant it was the underwear by 5 put it on or
