Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 4 August 1948 — Page 5

»

sires [ress

heer . deand avy 161%

RES’

OEE EERE EERIE EERE UREA OTR COE ERLE EULA OR ERO OLEACEAE EOE RLU TE IROL E LLCO LOREEN IHREN SATO TROON TORE ELST LAER TERT OEE OLE POPE PTOI

the satin gore Sizes

COURTEOUS ER ALERTED ETE TEEN SET TI

1)

s

A

« At all drug Indianapolis,

conference today to “de thing possible” legislative program. The President met we hour with Sens. Alben W. Barkley of Kentucky and Scott Lucas of Illinois and Reps. Sam Rayburn of Texas and John McCormack of Massachusetts. Afterward, Mr. Barkley told reporters that the President thinks his full program “is neces-

“And I think it would be bad for the country for Congress to adjourn without acting on the President's program,” Mr. Barkley said. Work on Housing Bill ‘A Senate-House subcommittee, meanwhile, went to work on details of a watered-down housing bill that will be brought up in the Senate shortly. The Republican bill does not contain any provision for public housing, slum clearance or other controversial features of the Taft-Ellender-Wagner bill which . the President endorsed. It is intended chiefly to furnish incentives and credit aids to private builders. The anti-infigtion and housing bills, drawn up by the GOP leadership, brought angry but futile OE from a group of Republican Young Turks” who charged tha The Jegiaigtion “Just isn't oa nt They planned to take their case Ni Ztting of the Senate's 51 blicans today, but the leadership's ter were certain to Sen. Robert A. rt (R. 0.), who had a big hand in drafting the GOP proposals, said he doubts|,, whether they can be acted on by Saturday, as SHEIMANY Planned, He sald adjournment o e special session may have to be postponed until “early next week.” The leadership’s’ schedule did not include any civil rights meas-| ures, indicating that Republicans are ready to drop their so far unsuccessful figh a southern filibuster on the anti-poll tax bill 4 Buying Controls The GOP anti-inflation measure would: ONE: Restore controls on in-

requirements for member banks one per cent on time deposits and three per cent on demand deposits. Mr. Truman asked for four and 10 per cent. THREE: Require the government to maintain a gold reserve

serve is 25 per cent. But the government has more than $23 billion worth of gold buried at Ft. Knox, Ky., almost enough to back federal reserve paper money 100 per cent.

Indiana Pastor Killed

HUNTINGTON, Ind, Aug. 4 (UP)—The Rev. P. Vergil Harris, 55, of Anderson, was fatally injured at 9:23 a. m. today when a truck skidded on wet pavement into the side of his car just south of here on U. 8. highway 224. The truck driver, Carl Anderson, 23, Van Wert, O., was uninjured.

Veterans to Meet

The 16th annual encampment of the 309th Ammunition Train organization will be held Sunday, Sept. 5, at Shakamak State Park, R. E. Jarvis, Terre Haute, is president of the veterans organization.

BENEFIT GROUP TO MEET Silver Star Review 15, Women’s Benefit Association, will meet at 8 p. m. tomorrow in its hall, 2615% E. 10th St.

Get Up Tired Out?

“Draggy” All Day Worn-out by Night?

thst Soe. us

at all Hook's and Haag Stores,

m (had worked as a checker for two

Joseph became acquainted with

In aekarg Set Richmond Gl i

“When one really is in love,

of the British visa in her purse and the promise of a British European Airlines ticket that would take her to England and start her on the way to America as a “war bride.” Eight months ago the American consulate in Berlin told Ingeborg the matrimonial: plans ter|he and Joe had worked out by ter! ail were “out of the question-— impossible.” ‘Never Gave Up’ Joe had attempted to bring her to the United States under the “GI sweetheart act.” Unromantic consulate officials said no on grounds the law wasn’t intended to facilitate “love by remote control.” “But we never gave up hoping and trying,” she said. “Now I'm I can fly to England and meet Joe on Thursday.” The former GI now is aboard|so the U. 8. Marine Falcon, en route to Southampton, where he will meet his fiancee for the first time.

TOGETHER AT LAST—Ingeborg Schlueter {above) will fly fo England from Berlin, Germany, tomorfow to meet Joseph Richmond. Ind. {in picture), for the first time, They will be married there. Difficulties with immigration rules have kept them apart.

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

tion And Housing :

nH,

his bride-to-be through a letter

from his brother, Ronald, who was stationed i in Berlin.

to Marry in England

Wooed and Won by Remote Control, Pretty

Fraulein Prepares to Become ‘War Bride’ * BERLIN, Aug. 4 (UP)—Pretty Ingeborg Schlueter, who was wooed and won by remote control, prepared today for a trip to England where she will marry her ex-GI sweetheart this week-end.

nothing is impossible,” she said

in commenting on her romance with 33-year-old Joseph Conti of Richmond, Ind., a sweetheart she has never seen, She was thinking

ules and “to intensify activities.” UE lost a recent NLRB elec-

Bandits fet $183 At Grocery Store

Two nonchalant bandits held

yay s

xf Ese

si

F

s5¥izes By &

i

gt i

8 =f

Frese i ?

=

Vana

{Fund Directors

o et] c 6

raise

Atsannanna saresssncen sruRaERAY

S100-1300 pounds .

aemsaneR aay

700-11 1100 pounds ase 1100-1300 pounds ~ | Common

23.50031.00

Free c Parking—Lot No. 2 Across

up ‘a grocery at 2005 Clifton St.

riage was removed yesterday when tattered American bills were exchanged for Ingeborg for currency the British authorities would accept. Ingeborg said her “romance by imi mall” began in September, 1946. It Just Happened ‘Joe's brother Roland, who was stationed in Germany, had fallen in love with Annaliese Schmelzer, a close friend of Ingeborg. When Roland told Joe about Ingeborg they started corresponding. “You just can’t understand how we fell in love,” Ingeborg said. “It just happened. Joe proposed, and I said ‘yes. Ingeborg sald she’s sure of Joe’s love, for he hired a lawyer, enlisted the aid of Ralph Harvey of Indiana and finally got a oy to the “neutral soil” of Englan When they a there will be no question of Joe's right to bring his wife to the United States under the G.I. sweetheart

The last obstacle to the mar-

bill,

Hungary ‘Boo

Velvet Glove Behind the Iron Curtain—

ms’ 3-Year

- Economic Recovery Plan

Nation Seeks to Dig Out From Ravages of War By Employing Full Resources of Citizens

pan Is Your Plan, Work for It.”

Competition.” The Three-Year Plan is designed to increase coal output 38 per cent, machinery produc tion 168 per cent, power 43 per cent, chemical products 40 per cent. Its aim is to improve the prewar living standard by 14 per cent. Every effort is being made to reach these goals in two and a half years. Authorities say proudly that coal, iron and steel production “already have passed prewar levels. 5-Year Plan Slated When this plan is ended, a Five-Year Plan with new targets is to be started. “It was necessary to establish|a a Three-Year Plan” said a government spokesman, “because war destruction and damage had brought standards to a level so low that recovery could not be left to natural forces.” The Goldberger plant employs 650 women and about 100 men. It was nationalized In y Pan 1047, along with heavy industry, mines and banks

Its monthly output is about 2,700,000 yards of cotton and rayon goods. Besides supplying the domestic market, quantities of the cloth go to Switzerland, Russia and metropolitan France. The greatest problem is dyes,

Dortad from Sie u/s and SwitzRussia supplies raw cotas [ond

Attractive 21-year-old Rosa Kelascheck is one of the “shock workers” among the women. She

GUARANTEED

WATCH REPAIRING ~ One Day te 0-Day Service A Fishermen! Come In and Get

- One of Our FISHING CALENDARS FREE Chas. C. Peek, Inc.

136 W. Wash. St

Last of Three Articles By ROSETTE HARGRQVE, NEA Staff Correspondent BUDAPEST, Aug. 4—Wherever you look in this city you see colorful slogans boosting Hungary's Three-Year Plan. ‘““Ihree-year Plad-—-Well Being,” says one.

“The Three-Year And on the bulletin board at the

textile factory at Obuda, in the outskirts: “Dear Comibe Here We Have a Working Competition, Not a Chatting |*™

$183.

strolled in shortly after he had {opened and ordered a quart of

tg he turned toward the refrigerator, they both drew pistols, and one drawled, “hold it.” They then forced him to pour the cash into a small cloth sack and instructed him to lie on the floor in a rear room. “Stay there until you hear the door slam,” the gunmen warned: Mr Stroud heard the door shut after about five minutes. That's when he called police,

New Invention Rings Buzzer, When Fish Bites

By Science Service

a hook to pull.

mitted through the line]

Foon

years without making a mistake. Her reward was a month's vaca-| tion at an Albanian resort with all expenses paid. Rosa works from 7:00 in the morning to 5:00 at night, 48 hours a week, for 160 .forints—about $14.50. For 27 cents a week she gets a hot midday meal at the plant canteen. :

At a food co-operative she can buy at least 10 to 15 per cent under regular market prices. She can buy textile material at eost. If she works overtime, she is paid a bonus of 25 per cent for the first two hours, 50 per cent for the next two, and so on—plus a free meal. Some workers get special privfleges. A railway worker, for instance, gets free or low-cost travel. If he works 200 hours a month, and has a certificate that he has been employed more than three years, he is not docked for holidays when he doesn’t work.

fed four times a day without charge. Layettes are provided for new habies. "When we visited the Goldberger

. nursery the 3-6 year group was

having its mid-day meal. All the tots rose, greeted us with the Communist clenched fist salute, shouted “Forward,” and went back to eating a dish of mar. row in thick sauce, with a hunk of sausage.

Some Don'ts For Pimples

pimples — you risk infection! Don’t suffer from itching pimples,

angry red other irritations: when

{fast relief. Makes skin look betiter, feel better, 35¢ (ne application delights or money | back, Peterson's Ontment allays

itchy feet, crac between toes.

Don't scratch—don't squeeze)

blotches, eczema or| tor’ soothing] antiseptic:

.| Peterson's Ointment offers you!

all druggists. seal

sounds. lcommercial fisherman, who may have a dozen or more lines out

ing to be hauled in.

Jackson Funeral Set for Tomorrow

lived in Indianapolis 13 years. Church in Walton. a daughter, Mrs. Mildred Cook,

George Jackson, Bement, Ill.

Close’ ‘Gaming’ Booths At Muncie Fair

gambling establishments.

tents last

gaming cated.

equipment was confis-

Advertisement Doctor's Invisible Liquid

Promptly Relieves Itchy Skin Rash!

Zemo—a Doce First applications of 2 Doc.

relieve itching; ‘burning of Skin Hashes, pr Pimples and similar surface skin an irritations. Zémo Aso aid) aids Backed y Sing

early today and escaped with;

Charles Stroud, 30, owner of Sood to choice Stroud’s Market, said the men

WASHINGTON, Aug, 4 — An| electrical that can a good friend both to the very lazy] 4 fisherman and the very busy one

line is ‘made fast to this hook, | and when a fish bites, the tug

the contact and sounds the

THE LAZY, vacationing fish-} | erman, with opé “Hine out, can]! lean back and snooze, or sit up and play bridge or engage in|‘: other activity may be] going on abroad, until the buzzer|

On the other hand, the busy

at once, will be notified by thei § buzzer whenever a fish is wait-| §

Services for William A. Jack-| son, who died yesterday in his| home, 307 E. 8t. Clair St, will] Zi be held at 10 a.m. tomorrow in|:

born in Montgomery County. He|?3 He was a member of Christian 3 Surviving are his wife, Lena; &f

Walton; a son, Charles ¥. Jack-|? son, Remington, and a brother,| =

MUNCIE, Ind; Aug. 4 (UP)— The Delaware County Fair con-|? tinued today, minus 10 conces- 7 sions which authorities said were! 79

Deputy sheriffs raided the 10|: night, closing them| | down. Operators were ordered to return money to patrons and

=f AI: LIL

The Decision Is Yours To Make Because every family knows its own financial situation . . . and has its ‘special preferences and needs .. . . Shirley Brothers never ah tempts to influence

decisions on funeral costs. Price is always

Sale of dL Scranton’

‘Lace Curtains

In Pairs and Panels 2; and 2.Yd. Lengths Large shipment of Scranton lace curtains to fll your

al i i a ee Th ie

left to YOUR wvoluns need. Choice of lacy patterns in 3% and $- > ry nlbction, Bnished, ready to hang. » oy a ’ : " || Panels 45 in. ] Shirley Brothers is ever wide, 21 $ 14 49 | 5 wie e, SE 3 W % $298 mindful also of the yds. long... long... priceless value you Panels 52 in. Pairs place on your tribute wide, 24 :$ 18 89 wide, 3 Ci $69 to a loved one. Every yds. long.... 10Dg «oor funerel . . . regardless Panels 52 in. Pairs, 5 of price . , . is con. ide, 8 yds. $998 [=i $379 ducted with the same re ides 3. ya. * dignity and the ident. ow; 68 in. feat attention to de- Fon 2% $229 Star Store, | J h ; -§ : EXTRA LENGTH 81x108-Inch "DAN RIV ER" v CENTRAL CHAPEL ih Bleached SHEETS ¢. : IRVING MILL Regular | 278 Susiity Crows Crown sheets shisls mage I by the ihe well-known Dan: CHAPEL you of long wear. iy iy BRL TLR : Star Store, Basement = 2 36-In. Scranton + 420m. WEST CHAPEL LACE CURTAIN NET LA I Quality Scranton lace cur< : Quality Scranton lace cur~ tain nets, 38 inches wide, tain nets in choice of lacy eat 1 ¢ I | Egil i Ee aad Bort ory saade” : Soft, ory Solon Service Odds and Ends From T

After every Inventory there are should be

$795]

$69

Ew

ise

(4)—~$11.95 Gas Riates, 2

(4)—$9.95 O41 Btayen, 2

0 $1395 SAND BOXES

EEEETEMO

Metal ‘bottoms, S8%|

canvas top.