Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 12 November 1948 — Page 3

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FRIDAY, NOV. 12, 1948 ___ : :

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Farm Bureau OK'sLilibet to Have Daughter, Predicts Shah

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Man, Youth Die

oul : Turk Rug Maker Has Guessed Sex of 34 he said 1 anid 5 & boy Tor the s=52 | General Wace Federal Program our of 36 Babies Over 10-vear Span Be. >» In State Traffic erilias who SAN MATEO, cal, Nov. UP) CFtiites Ruban might) Next he went into a conference e kidnaped z otes tenti as well put the blue layette back in mo Ss an out a pink| guessed actress A man and a youth were killed 43, of New- 1 1 ¥ Retention one. Shah Nasib says she will give birth to a girl. Ee tes in Indians ate pevidedts yesters sday night. A Of Present Setup That's good enough for local citizens, who have marveled for|y. ) i: that one too, and also day, state police reported. cBhane, as-. : Retention of the long-range More than a decade at the Turkish rug maker's uncanny ability yight - on & nghter 1so ay, 8 police repo at {or the : : Federal Farm program, and to Predict the sex of unborn children. actress Ann Shirley in 1940, | _Leiand Bogard, 43, of West ng contrace Capital So tion: to cialized| Over a 10-year span, the Shah | : | Terre Haute, died in St. Anthony's ay talten P urces bitter opposition soc nas ed correctly the sex ofjat least a picture of them. For the past few years, the ital of in received when after sunset See ‘Leveling Off » today highlighted a = "= 0 0." cal babies before! In the ‘case of Princess Eliza- Shah has devoted himself to [L0SPital of injuries ~ 2ling : series of resolutions discussed at : th, the” Shah never has seen|w PD o his motorcycle collided with a car jreeks from % k they were born. beth, {weaving rugs and laying off the itika on the WASHINGTON, Nov. 12 (UP) the closing session of the 30th Moreover, Nabib has ‘her. But on the day the Princess more hazardous profession of| driven by Carroll Newport, 23,. ‘some seven +—Administration sources pre- annual Indiana Farm. Bureay NO : OF to/ married the Duke of Edinburg, trying to second-guess chrom-|Brazil, at an intersection in Terre hin convention. right on the births of children t0| x, geclarea the couple's first ast of Tris. . Soa Jaday that organized la- in the Hotel Severin,[80 out of 86 movie stars. He chijd would be a girl josomes. Haute. . s fourth-round wage drive 238 delegates from 92 Hoosier/missed six, he said, only because > - | On U. 8. 12, a mile west o ———— will bring the smallest—and prob-! Ihe delete what promised/he did not know the real names| The Shah has quite a oe ioas| Three Local Students Baileytown, George Charles Metz~

ably the last — general postwar pay boost. = In support of their forecast, they cited an apparent leveling off in the cost of living and a desire by labor and industry not to raise prices again. : 5 Government economic and labor experts said there is little doubt that another round of wage increases Will be granted in 1949. The fourth-round drive already has begun and many increases have been negotiated averaging around nine cents an hour. This compares with the 18l,-cent-an-hour pattern of 1946, the 15% cents of 1947 and 11 cents of 1948.

Patricia (Satira) Schmidt poses in her dressing room before making her first, appearance at the Latin Quarter night club in

to be a stormy session as the first of 47 proposed resolutions was presented. : After a bombastic half-hour debate during which some delegates wrangled over the percentage of parity they thought should be established, the convention adopted the long-range farm program resolution. ~ Vote Retention In effect, the resolution calls for retention of a “long-range farm program, as enacted,” providing for graduated price support and modernized parity, plus

of the mother. The Shah says his ability is a family gift, handed down through generations. He won't reveal his secret, other than to admit two of the ingredients are knowing the real names of the mother and father and the approximate date the child is expected. Sometimes, when it’s a particularly hard choice, Nasib wants to See the parents in person. Or

additional legislation which will provide for the maximum of local autonomy.

average. He started out in 1934

by guegsing that = neighborhood Named to Sphinx Club couple wo me parents o Wisin Slate. Service a boy. Nineteen days after cp,wWFORDSVILLE, Nov. 12 Nasib went on record, Mrs. E. R.| _rTpree Indianapolis students are Becher gave birth to a boy. This inspired the Shah of San! (jun, national honorary group for Mateo to take a flyer on several men who have attained promijother expectant births in town| pence in campus activities and {with never a miss. {athletics, at Wabash College

among 12 elected to the Sphinx|

| Then he branched out into the, They are Bob Risley, John ‘field of celebrities. Four times! Kroetz and Don Rogers.

Gerald 28, Three Rivers, Mich., driver of the truck,

STRAUSS SAYS—TRADITION WITH A TOUCH OF TOMORROW

| It also asked for co-ordination of federal agencies affecting farm| programs, insofar as practical and in the interests of efficiency! |and economy. { In another resolution, the farmfers recommended federal aid to education but demanded local au-| |tonomy; asked for continuation! and expansion of crop insurance »on a regional basis; continuation| {and strengthening of “our farm] {credit structure with a continued and well-planned movement toward farmer ownership and farmer control.” Amend Resolution Later, the convention amended

Newport, Ky. The young exotic dancer was recently freed from a Havana, Cuba, prison while serving the second year of a I5year sentence for the yacht shooting of John Lester Mee, her married lover.

Increased Productivity

One afficial said he hopes the new wage boosts can be made without corresponding price in-|_ creases. This would mean in- ° ® ceased empnanis in 106545 vr Allied Court Dooms Tojo gaining on wage increases coming, | y out of higher productivity, he sie. ‘The Ari. aieaay mis wre @ Qthers After Long Trial that 1949 pay boosts come out of increased productivity rather than; (Continued From Page One) [rise again “in a military sense. further price increases. !did he show any remorse for his| Sentenced with Tojo to die “We are fast getting back tndeeds. He seemed only to regret were: : 5 —— the day when a three-to-five-cent- that his bid for world power had| Gen. Kenji Doihara, the “Tiger an-hour pay boost will be a sub-|failed. {of China. : stantial and satisfactory raise’! Clinging still to-his worship of| Gen. Seishiro Itagaki. said one White House adviser. © (Emperor Hirohito as a “divine| O° Se a. He said these mechanical ad- being,” Tojo said he had feared| en. Juang 4 io the first resolution—long-range, vances, when added to the great from the first that the Emperor Koki Hirota former preuiler farm program—and asked Con-| improvements made during the would be involved in the trial, 2283 f the dread ‘citi gress to appropriate adequate war, should result in a 50 per cent|“but now that it is clear that he(3nd leader of the dread u So. | funds to carry out the legislation. improvement in the nation’s|will not be, my mind is at rest” |Dationalistic Black Dragon So-| just before the noon recess,

« 3 y. \which promised to spark another standard of living by 1955. I wanted to take the entire my. on1y two of the defendanislactive Gebatieg tercon mong

NOTICE TO ALL : MEN WHO DEMAND CLOTHES OF CHARACTER AND QUALITY—AND WHO CHOOSE T0 PAY A MODERATE PRICE:

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ammunition (the

, | ~ * guns come and Cash in Bonds [responsibility for he Var, but un |who received prison sentences fOr the farmers, another resolution 2 Seth Meanwhile, the CIO economic, Driunare A od el i vo '|shorter terms than life were Shi- called for the fine and imprison-| A outlook reported that millions of je WY Trea. FeRIS er oad. |genori Togo, Japanese Foreign ment of any person or group of! oor

: Tojo Thanks Counsel {Minister at the time of Pearl persons, coloring oleo in an at-| American families have used up| ge gave special thanks to his | arbor. who was given 20 years Dr os ng ey rate

all their savings to meet the ris- American defense counsel, George , ignment | ing cost of living. It said only Blewett of Philadelphia, and then | Co the dale Of his arralg butter,

d one-half years ago, and! those in the top 10 per cent in-image this prediction for the fu- Ive an Foreign ail 20 th

. come bracket are still able to tyre of the nation he led to ruin: “ 0 { y , the -legged diploWake any “substantial” SRvings. ~The spirit of ihe Japanese p18 me. - a et Ee ore] a ines Fawn

Three million American fam- people is certain to rise again,| ’ {lies cashed in their last U. S./but there are great difficulties | 5 Japan's surrender aboard the . | {battleship Misouri in Tokyo Bay bonds during the year that ended ahead and I pray that the people gon 3 1945 | |] ons Ig ’ + early in 1948, the CIO publication still have the courage to over-| is : : | : said. Since the death of OPA in/come them.” Courtroom Crowded 1946, it said, between 5 million, His attorney explained that! The courtroom—where once the, (Continued From Page One) and 6 million families have dis- Tojo did not necessarily mean plotting Tojo lectured his subor-|gjana Farm Bureau; Clarence posed of their bonds. that the Japanese people would [dinates on the imperialistic plans, jackson, ‘executive vice president TT {that led ultimately to Japan's of the Indiana Chamber of Com-| |downfall—was jam-packed as the merce; Harry Miesse, head of the!

jclimactic session of the trial, (Indiana Taxpayers’ Association: i i STRAUSS | which had lasted longer than any Neal W. Edwards, president of the True enough—Sirauss has the finest in the SAYS: |in history and had rolled up Some|CI0 Industrial Union Council; world of Men's Clothes and Accessories—

'10,000,000 words of testimony, Frank Murray, representative of|

Two others of the original 28 defendants had died during the |trial. The remaining one, Shumei Okawa, father of extreme Japanese nationalism, went early in the trial as a result of | previous loose living. | His insanity manifested itself

mad |

learned the Senate GOP majority had begun plans to introduce the {first bonus bill of the session. jprobably on opening day. Because the lower house must, originate all appropriations, the| {Republican Senators had a made-| {to-order excuse for leaving out of

The world-famous Murphy Blades for carving—including

WEARINGTON WORSTED SUITS—$45

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! : Ho | when he several times slapped the| their Senate bill any proposal to carving Turkey— They are something! finance the bonus. Strategy here are on the - IS, | bald head of Tojo during court to let the D ti r | sessions. After examination, he| 33 0 €t the Democratic-con- Sixth Floor

SPEND THE SEASON -

{was confined in an asylum, and

Some Take Notes

The defendants sat in charac- | teristic attitudes as Sir William

| against the Japanese leaders. | Some stared at the black-robed court justices. A few doodled or {took notes. Others gazed blank{ly as though daydreaming, | Tojo, still. dressed” in his plain military. uniform shorn of “alll decorations, picked his nose. The court ruled finally that the prosecution had proved the fol-| lowing counts in the 55-point in-| dictment under which the men! were tried: That all defendants partici- , pated in “a common plan or coft-| spiracy” to secure military, naval, |

NOTICE!

| the charges against him dropped. | |

trolled lower house sweat out the appropriation angle. Even this early, however, it was |apparent the battle would not be s0 "simple. Before the session is well under way there may be a

{read on through the last of that/dozen or more bonus bills, eacn {part of the 1200-page judgment providing a different amount of 01 the court which delat in general bonus, each setting up a different | [terms with the crimes charged method of payment. }

At a pre-legislative caucus yesterday, Republican Senators agreed to attempt to deal with the Democrats whereby the mi-! nority members of each house would select their own membership on key committees. i Purpose of the move was to facilitate organization of the two houses before the session opens Jan. 6. The mounting contest over!

the bonus made it appear likely.

no agreement could be reached] unless the Democrats and Repub] licans could also agree to share| both credit and blame on the final

Does Strauss have boots? You can bet your—

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and islands therein or bordering| thereon. Countries Named That all defendants waged a war of aggression against China. That all defendants waged -a{war of aggression against the

DETROIT, Nov. 12 (UP) — A strike closed four Chrysler Corp. | plants and idled 13,500 workers for the fourth day today. The! DeSoto, Dodge truck and two Chrysler division plants are af-|

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| began. the Taxpayers’ Federation, and! i much—(a reat deal!)—in the > In the double-tiered prisoners’ President Carl Mullen of the In- But it also has g % Hunting Clothes | dock, 22 or jhe Qetendahis gat i diana Federation of Labor. lesser priced brackets—all in the good - and paraphernalia— chairs as they had sat through Bore F Jithi i i i all the weary sessions of their pil FO BEN sfandard of faste—also with the Services that (1548 varios)... trial. ia xs Three were ill in hospital ana, fying to consolidate the views of surround the finest. These and hundreds Floor (we issue ¥ | these powerful pressure organiza- : all learned in their sick-beds later ; | i Indiana Hunting » ps Babin EER ed Se snd te GBF was of ofers. Boll vp a life imprisonment. Es m wilting 1 was ’ td M05 3

{United States. fected. : : be IN KUMFORTITES That all defendants waged a sm —m——— Allwool GABARDINES and ara COVERTS L war of aggression against Great i (please note we said all-wool! have a feeling ; . Britain and The Netherlands. | | ion i rid. tnelh Old Man Winter has delivered That 10 defendants waged a! n | that are 4. somafion in fhe; Slack Wo hic and:an butingt : ils war of aggression against France:: { z or , his introductory offer I rt oy aon rar ‘Indiana olis : that brings them of bluster and snow—but Va aggression against Russia! ! P | CANTERBURY HATS FOR MEN 1 50 in great numbers . a . lin 4 be ea aay Re to the = 7 : you can put the skids under | That 13 defendants waged a : , ‘ . him with KUMFORTITES— | Jar of sggression against the EVENTS TODAY "Camfeel" Felts (they feel like Camel's Hair) — and smooth : bodithy Shep : . d bstitute f Mongounn Dipes Peptic and (Te ep mn, Murat Theater, | finish felts — bound edge and welt edge styles— Third ome : : STITU r e Sovie nion in x | - jes, CR . . Floor. . “ . the hal fo 5 . 0) ° That all defendants CEP] Ne Tent cruel Murat Theater, | They are something to head into at 7.50! : : grandmas hot brick. | Toshio Shiratori, former am-| a r= os . oF {bassador to Italy, ordered, au- EVENTS TOMORROW Secioiiite # . . . {thorized ‘and permitted commis-| Conference of Presidents and Secretaries, : Fine nylon and wool fabric— jsion of conventional war crimes. Mean Hestqureen nx “The BEST at COTTON FLANNEL SHIRTS—3 50 . : ine full-fashioned That all defendants, again ex- ; ' : . Hag he i ili is |cepting Shiratori, failed to take BIRTHS ois YOUR pries. Bright plaids — Sanforized and Vat Dyed— : osier ont miss visiting our |adequate steps to secure ObServ- sy methodist—Jonn, Ruth Dufiwoody, no matter what i hil wi lance and prevent breaches of = girls. yo Eon? the price” + a freat to the bosom and a treat to the wallet. : di hosiery bar while you're ol jomventions 2nd laws ot war int dletwatu_yeivin. Nova Fieming: naturally J : S r {respect to prisoners of war an ert, Rosalie Cooprider. Myron, Doris : i Sleek and snug and comfy om | civilian’ internees. Pall, Nie Bleogius im aan. | extends to the : : e. waist to foe . . . sleek and snug | py JAMOCENt on One Count |At Colemat_Gegrge, urotny ress, Wit FOURTH MEN'S HOSIERY—55¢ and 65c¢ i. f . UI r them The court ruled that because! Intosh; Gordon, Mary Gardner, z FLOOR—one , : a, and comfy ... youll wea : - of technical duplications, it was|At St, Vincents “Donald, Louise Borgman: of America's Fancy-cotioms = siting souls sblazer shipes— ox ibs : . | k necessary to consider only one| Komiance; Edwin, Dolores Richardson. . ey 9 . - . a. under skirts, coats, slacks or other count, that charging the|At, St. Fiancis_Caivin, Irene Curry: Great Shops windowpane checks — the works! r Ls ski pants Japanese. defendants with con- Uckiiney: Merion, I Ruts Beck” for Young Men. i : ¥ spiring with Germany and Italy s : 4 2a. Suntan or Scarlet, Sizes for “domination of the whole A an Wilma Morris: BR Rinsie, Jocsis asp ; a 2 world” Ss FORDS—UNDER TEN DOLLARS i ck, Carol Kennison; Murl, 12 to 20 All deféndants were found pitty Fonsier, chard, Lavonne siler: MEN S OX ‘ or 4.95 Br on gills count, on) Grech, “anes panne Shelton; Jack, Husky Oxfords — with stocky leather soles : sufficient evidence to bear out]. or Yi Hanseimann; Wiliam, and stocky leather uppers — good to have .between you 4 the sweeping charge. p ! Dora Spickler; Raymond, Leon Bradley: \ and the cold, wet earth. . : Sy

Then came a short recess, and

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