Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 26 January 1949 — Page 7
ol
-e
ressee
vs rneu
Bs 8 2
| { WEDNESDAY, JAN. 26, 1649 3 BUIERS Geil Sle Raa % Fr ile
A
-
ig
gen
. i $y “@ 3 oR Ta Be SR $ 3 Go Shy f bee Eh i
»
wi : : ae
i
Within the Means of All
re
~ EVERYONE who hes seen the - sailfish strike has been thrilled
There is a Shidey service within the financial means of every family. When circumstances make it neces. vary the After Service Budget Plan may be used. The After Service Budget Plan is a convenient method of distributing the entire cost of the service over a
. |Aretic. »" We were shoved into. one of
passion of our lives.
and fish soup. Bread became the wild and thin.” Once in a great)
by the power and beauty shown, :
~ EVERYONE who has tasted the excellent quality of SCHOENLING has been thrilled by its brewed in
¢
IRVING HILL CHAPEL ~ WEST CHAPEL
period ‘of months. Such an arrangement is handled by Shirley Brothers—from first payment to the last— . no account is ever assigned to banks or financial in. Fifutions.
wo lh
3
TRULY A REMEMBERED SERVICE
the stone buildings. It was divided into four compartments. In each compartment or room were put 80 prisoners. Along the walls were narrow wooden planks fastened one |above the other. Each of us was assigned to a plank, That was bed. There was no straw, no blanket, nothing. A bare wooden board.
In the center of the room, a small iron stove which we could burn in the evening with powdered coal. It made little héat. The room was always below . There was an empty gasoline lantern hanging from the ceiling. It was never lighted. At night, after work, we groped our way through the pitch-dark room to the plank and fell on it exhausted. We slept in our clothes.
of water. Usually, it was frozen solid. During the week, we did not wash at all. Once a week, we marched to
a washhousé. Hach man was
Grey. Sizes 24 to 30. $1.99
Spun Rayon
SKIRT
Miller-Wohl Hits the Jackpot Again!
S
I’
Powder Blue, or Blue, or
SanButton-irimmed; smooths fitting skirt, Solid color Spun Rayon. Black, Navy, Luggage Ton, Aqua, Melon, Powder
Grey. Sizes 24 to
30. $1.99
Extra Special?
Cotton
BLOUSES $190
45 E. Washington
SCOTTY SAYS: _
given a can of hot water and his {head was’ shaved. ’ » . r | WE DIDN'T talk much. We {knew there were NKVD spies {among us. The slightest infrace {tion of rules was punished by beatings, It was a camp of_ silence. : | We wore stuffed or quilted jackjets and two pair of rough work pants. We had thin coats and |caps with ear flaps which tied be{neath your chin. We had felt
Why Not Try This? The Family ‘Scrapbook
=
'e would do anything to get ft. [friend and I caught two one day. There were women prisoners in/We used to boil them in a can. the camp—about 4000 of them./The meat was tough and stringy. Some were dolitical prisoners like|It tasted a little like rabbit. - I was. Others were criminals. But this time, we had to go out They did the same work as the for a minute. And while we were men. gone, somebody stole our .two After work. sometimes, the rats, Wheh we got back, the pan younger women. prisoners would was empty. We could not find out fcome into our barracks. They who did it. If we had, we would would offer themselves to the men have tried to kill him. for bread. Their price was two| Many leading Communists were! slices of bread. We turned away./in the camp. Some had been We ate every crumb of bread our-/jeaders in the Communist Revo-| salves. Rroup of pri { lution. | ac ul TiSoners -Was camp after purges of 1037-38. An-! divided into work brigades of 20|dret Vishinsky, the present Soviet! men each. The foreman of each|gelegate to the United Nations, brigade was called the brigadier. was tlie prosecutor who sent
Many were sent to the
power 10 please. You, too, will say, it's CINCINNATI'S FINEST)
In front there was a barrel).
been sentenced for some nonpolitical crime of some sort. . » THE BRIGADIER was our boss. He lived in the barracks with us. He passed out rations and could beat us if we did not obey him. He got double rations of bread. He had enough to give the women prisoners. He used to bring one of them into the barracks almost every night. The Soviets knew what we would do for bread. Every prisoner got his ration if his work output was equal to the average for the group. If it wasn't, he got less. If he worked harder than average and dug more coal in a day, he got two extra slices of bread. I was strong at first, and for a while got extra bread because I would work harder than the aver-
I was put to work in the coal mine. In this part of the north, great blizzards spring up in a few minutes and the sky turns black and snow will be on you before you know it. )
| By DR. ERNEST G. OSBORNE
Those of us who have were into staid adulthood may it/help each other. hard to believe that, as children, | we were noisy. The yo!
laround us today {other seem much more boisterous {than we remember children in our generation to have been. |” To be sure, natural childlike ac[tivities were more often sup{pressed by grown-ups when we {were children. It may be that a
have proved otherwise. But the | fact remains that noise is natural {and fun for children. | Since grown-ups and children live together, there probably must be some compromises. Too often in the past we have expected the children to do all the compromis4 ing—"to be seen and not heard.” | If possible, one part of the house or apartment should be largely {the children’s. If floors are | covered with rugs or even with
| backyard or sidewalk-—can be the main playing space for children. {If we .don't nag too much but disturbing to
be co-operative,
| We
. . ” WE HAD to walk three or four miles tv the mine shaft. used to tie ourselves together with ropes before starting. ‘When the blizzard came, Wwe
|would all lle down in the snow Many times
and clihg together. we were covered by drifts,
Hunger drove me on. You ¢an-
He was a prisoner, usually a Communist Party man who had|
We worked terribly hard. We! “f had only rough tools. |
{many of them there. | “nn 8 THERZ WAS the sister of a former NKVD head. Her brother {had founded the camp. His name
was Yagoda. Then he was purged! .
and shot. She was sent because {she was his sister. 2 ” ” ” { LATER, 1 met another high |UKVD official who was a prisoner. {He told me that in 1945 there {were more than 20 million Rus{sian citizens in concentration |cam | In 1947, a half million farm {workers and over a million in{dustrial workers were. sentenced to concentration camps. Hundreds: of thousands of returning Red Army soldiers were also sentenced after they came back from the war, I am sure there are betyeen 22 and 25 million Russians in con-| centrations camps today. Tomorrow, I will tell you some more | Soot life there.
{
ROEBUCK AND CO
Distributed by FARBER DISTRIBUTING CO., 1420 N.
—— OS
Senate Ave.
a
Important Announcement!
not believe what it will do to a man. There were two brothers) in my barracks. They were
somehow or
work out ways in which the noise| adults can be iminimized, children will usually
Creomulsion blends creosote by special process with other time tested medicines for coughs. It
comains no narcotics: -
!
MOVING!
MOVING ! FURNITURE FROM ALL OVER THE STATE TO-
ECONOMY FURNITURE OUTLET ITS DRIVING M
CRAZY WITH MERCHANDISE - CRAZY WITH PRICE REDUCTIONS
— (TUR
HE
Short Hair for Miss Modern THE NEW EMPIRE LINE HAIR-DO ® OUR OWN CREATION ®
JANUARY SALE PRICE - 33% * | Worth twice this price. Machine or ineless. ¢ months. Nowhere, absolutely nowhers, can you te value. ® Nationally Known Supplies Used. ® Work Guaranteed,
® Services With » Smile,
® Execlient for Difould, Hard Too Wave Mair.
Open 8130 A. M,, Servios Taken Until 8 P, M., Come Day or Nite Open Until 10 P. M. Dally
Baptists and had been sentenced | because they refused to accept! Communist teachings. They were both decent, educated men. They always together trying to
| Starting This.
beechwood
OF CHANGE IN STORE HOURS
a Yer
OP
EN EVERY |
FRIDAY NIGHT|
WE
{
Complete Schedule of New .Store- Hours -
Starting Friday
UNTIL 9 O'CLOCK
REMAIN OPEN EVERY MONDAY NIGHT UNTIL 9 O'CLOCK
EVERY SATURDAY THE STORE WILL CLOSE AT 5:30 P. M.
WILL CONTINUE TO
MONDAY ... 12 Noon Uniil 9 P. M: TUES, WED. THURS.
'AND SATURDAY ...930 A M. Uni FRIDAY ... 9:30 A M. Until 9 P. M.
¥ dh
