Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 28 January 1941 — Page 16

10

4 Flee Fire in Night Attire: WILLKIE HEARS Dog and Canary Suffocated AIR-RAID SIREN

‘She said ak the damage could a i ot be estimated. e. fire bioke ‘ is t Confers With More British Chiefs, Gets 1000 Letters

COMMISSION IN BERLIN ° _ BERLIN, Jan. 28 (U. P.).—Members of a United States commission for organization of relief in Ger-man-occupied countries arrived in Berlin yesterday after a five-day

tour through Belgium and a twoday visit to the Netherlands.

Guaranteed . WATCH REPAIRING DONE = EXPERTS

JH. H. M layer, | Inc.

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Named Land Clerk

GUARD AIR UNIT | HEADING SOUTH

9 Planes Expected to Be At New Mississippi

DEATHS

Edward J. Mulvaney Edward Joseph Mulvaney, who for the last seven years operated a tavern at 1630 E. Washington St,

] A widow and her three daughters were forced to flee barefooted and in their night attire into the streets early today when fire broke out in their six-room home at 843 N. Hamilton Ave.

through! to the first floor after starting/in some ashes in the basement. The floor and furnishings

‘Two family pets, a dog and a canary, were suffocated. Mrs. Lela ‘Lee, the widow, who lives with her three daughters,

Cora Jane, Beulah and 15-year-old|

Marjorie, was awakened shortly after 3 a. m. and found the downstairs room full of smoke. ‘She was sleeping with Cora Jane in a downstairs room. Coughing, and half blinded by the dense smoke, she ran upstairs and awakened the other two daughters and then called the Fire Department. The four went to the home of a ' neighbor, Louis Lay, 834 N. Hamilton Ave.

water.

—Juvenile officers today held phis, Tenn., Miss Atchley,

personal months ago.

fornia to see him.

were dameged badly by smoke and

AUTRY GIRL FAN, 14, - DETAINED BY POLICE PASADENA, Cal, Jan. 28 (U. P.).

year-old Laverne Atchley of Memwho hitch-hiked here to see her screen idol, Gene Auirey. officers said, met Mr. Autry While he was making a appearance tour several She started keeping a scrapbook Of pictures and clippings. Then she decided to come to Cali-

From ‘Men of Street.’

LONDON, Jan; 28 (U. 2.).—Wendell L. Willkie experienced his first

subjected. to a long, intermittent attack by German raiders. He went through a crowced day cf appointments and : visits. Mr.: Willkie got his first air raid experience when he was driving through the bcmb-shattered, fireswept ruins of the London City— the financial district,

Visits Common;

He visited the House of Commons, but ‘arrived too late to. hear Prime Minister Winston Churchill make a

air raid today when Lindon was |

Mack Reed . . . appointed by Auditor.

Miss.

vision

Base by 3:30.

Nine 220-mile-an-hour Army observation planes are winging South today—one of the last units of the Federalized National Guard of Indiana to leave for a year’s training in Mississippi. At 9 a. m. the, planes took off one by one from Stout Fiéld, then joined together aloft to form a Vechelon and headed for Meridian, (Key Field), 100 .niles from Camp Shelby where the 38th Diis quartered. The unit, known as the 113th Observation Squadron, was scheduled to arrive at its new home base at 3:30 p. m. today in a non-stop hop..

died yesterday in St. Francis Hospital. He was 59. A former sailor and steamfitter, he lived at 1528 E. Ohio St. He received an honorable discharge in 1906 from the U. S. Navy after four

| years of service.

He was a member of Holy Cross Catholic Church, the Hciy Name Society of the Church and ihe Steamfitters’ Union. H2 is survived by his wife, Mamie, and a son, Edward F. Mulvaney, of Indianapolis. Funeral services will be heid at 8:30 a. m. Thursday in the home and at 9 a. m. in the church. Burial will be in Holy Cross Cemetery.

With folks all around suffering with contagious cnlds) be just as careful as you and you may gYoid 8 a lot BE sic ,, trouble and wi Follow these simple rules of heal Live normally. Avoid excesses. Eat nk plenty of water.

BEWARE NOW OF EPIDEMIC COLDS!

eee. Here's Some Good Time-Tested Advice pi

IF A CHEST COLD OR COUGHING COLD DEVELOPS (some colds g get by sll pres cautions) depend on Vic to relieve miseries. Rub Vapo ous throat, chest and back and cover with a. warmed cloth. VapoRub acts to bring relief 2 ways at once. It

simple food. Keep

The two casualties were a bull-| She heard he was on location at brief speech. He sat in the distin- Stout Field will be closed for its elimination regular. Beware of stimulates surface of chest and back

dog, “Butch,” and a canary, “Laddy.” “I don’t know what made me awaken,” Mrs. Lee said. “I didn't

Palm Springs and decided tc | go there. distant relatives who notified the police juvenile department, and the

hear the dog bark.”

girl was detained.

Lhe had been staying with

FASHION SHOW

MRS. DOREE SMEDLEY

A

with

guished strangers gallery watching the scene intently while the House debated the suppression of the Daily Worker and the Week, two Communist organs. After listening to Parliariiert debate freedom of the press while the anti-aircra’t batteries crashed outside, he remsrked: “That is democracy at work. It’s wonderful !”’ When Mr. Willkie left the gallery he was taken to the office of Maj. Clement Attlee, Labor the War Cabinet. Mr. Attlee, Arthur Greenwood, another Labor member of the inner Cabinet, and Baron Grenfell. lunched with them in thle strangers dining room.

Talks to Cardinal Hinsley

Mack Reed, Portland, teday was appointed State land clerk by State Auditor Richard T. James. Vir. Reed, formerly associated with the Jay Garment Co. of Portland, will assume his new duties Feb. 1. He succeeds Vestal Davis, Indianapolis, a Democrat, who resigned to re-enter private business. : As State land clerk, Mr. Reed will have.charge of the files on all public lands and the issuance of State deeds. He has been active in State Young Republican circles. His salary is $2400 a year.

PLANS PROBE OF

$7,300,000 WPA enlargement program to fit it ag one of the nation’s most modern military airfields. Ultimate plans have not been disclosed, although it is believed a large Army Air Corps unit eventually will base here. The last of the Indianapolis infantry units left here today by train for Camp Shelby. The headquarters of the 38th Division, which includes Federalizedguardsmen from Indiana, Kentucky and West Virginia, closes at the Indianapolis Armory at 5 p. m. tomorrow—and at the same time the new headquarters will open at Camp ‘Shelby. Lieut. Col. Robert J. Axtell, assistant chief of staff, Division personnel officer, will close the headquarters here and be the last guardsman in Indiana to leave to

member of There he met

He

Francis M. Tuley

Funeral services will be held at 1:30 p. m. tomorrow in Shirley Brothers Centra] Chapel for Francis M. Tuley, a retired Kingan & Co. employee, who died yesterday. Burial will be in Crown Hill. Mr. Tuley, who was 82, lived at 2709 W. Washington St. He was with Kingan & Co. 54 years and was a member of the company’s Old Timers Club. He was born in Columbus and has lived at the W. Washington St. address 35 years. He was a trustee and an active member of the West Washington Street Methodist Church. Survivors are three daughters, Mrs. Edith Bannon and Mrs. John R. McCallian, both of Indianapolis,

wet Pe and dra Take some exercise daily —preferabl outdoors. Get plenty of rest and s eep. Then use two time-tested treatments when needed.

AT -THE FIRST SIGN OF A SNIFFLE, SNEEZE OR NASAL IRRITATION... put a few drops of Vicks Va-tro-nol up each nostril right away. This helps to prevent many co ds from gevelop. ing, because Va-tro-nol is expressly designed to help Nature's own enses against colds. (If a head pos ga causes stuffiness, you'll find that a few drops of Va-tro-nol helps clear the clogging mucus and makes breathing freer and easier.)

likea warming poultice. At thesame time it releases helpful medicinal vapors that are brea direct ito the irritated air passa

Both Va-tro-nol 1 and Xd VereRub have been tested Ugh Years of use in millions of (aus you use two medicines you are not experimenting, you are not taking needless chances. Remember: If the condition of the cold fails to respond quickly to treatment—or if more serious trouble is dicate all ur clan t away. {a the Bally tc prepared! Get a bottle of Vicks Va-tro-nol and a jar of Vicks VapoRub Soday.

Why Suffer

| After inspecting damege done to the Parliament buildings b§ bombs, he motored to Westminster Palace for a talk with Arthur Cardinal Hinsley, head of the Roman Catholic Church in Britain. - Mr, Willkie was driviag from St. Paul's Cathedral to the Bank of England when | the first siren wail started. He had left his steel helmet at his hotel and he did rot go back for it, but continued t» the bank where he conierred wi ‘h Montagu Norman,

King May Receive Him

Mr. Willkie's invesiigation of Britain at war brough;<him hundreds of letters from the poorer sections of London, inviting him to tea. It © was untlerstood | that King George would receivei him some time during his two weeks visit. Inspecting the bomb’ damage at St. Paul's, Mr. Willkie came to great blocks of fallen masoriry in front of the high altar and exclaimed, “Outrageous.” The Dean, Dr. W. R. Matthews, gave Mr. Willkie for a souvenir the r:mains of an incendiary bomb which had lodged in the dome and burned out; harmlessly. Willkie stuffecl it into his overcoat pocket,

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join the Army’s .regulars down South. Maj. Gen. Robert H. Tyndall, division commander, and the remainder of his staff are now en route to the new post.

and Mrs. R. A. Ulrey of Vincennes: a sister, Mrs: Rilla Morrison, of Holton; a brother, James E. Tuley, of Clinton, and four granddaughters.

FUNERALS

of Character & Distinction 3925 E. New York St. Ambulance. IR-1178.

LABOR DISPUTES

House Group Also to Inquire Into Charges Unions Demand Exorbitant Fees.

WASHINGTON, Jan. 28 (U, P.). —The House Judiciary Committee today planned to investigate labor strife in defense industries and charges that unions are demanding exorbitant initiation fees from defense workers. Chairman Hatton W. Sumners said the “entire labor situation in defense industries and projects” will be studied, possibly by a subcommittee. The full committee meets today. It already has before it bills to outlaw the closed shop on defense jobs and to ban strikes against firms holding defense contracts until the Secretary of Labor has had a month to attempt mediation. 600 Strike at Cleveland

This was the situation today in| the defense industries: A strike at Cleveland involved 600 workers at the Standard Tool Co. where subcontracts were on file from firms holding defense orders. Work on defense program materials was stopped at the Kent, Wash, Northwest Metal Products Co. when 60 American Federation of Labor sheet metal workers went on strike to protest the hiring of a foreman. The Farm Equipment Organizing Committee (C. I. O.) kept shut down the Rock Falls, Ill, plant of the International Harvester Co. where workers are demanding union recognition. Seek Peace at Mobile Federal labor conciliators sought to settle the strike of 3400 C. I. O. shipbuilders that has held up repair work on vessels for the U. 8. Navy and British interests at the Alabama drydocks and shipbuilding Co, Mobile, Ala. A joint conference between officials of the Allis-Chalmers Co. and the U. A. W.-C. I. O. was arranged.

STA TE DEATHS

yA LANDA A MIE wil Mattie I PERUS aft Bosh, 60. gre: ) . SHELBYVILLE—Miss Mollie B. Jones, u Robert; son, Robert Jr: ters, Mrs, Ms Sisters, Mrs. India Elkins and

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NM their pocketbooks. | a and Mrs. Lillie Survivors: Er ha 'W. Rinehardt, 81. Sur- | e,

Raugh ters, Mrs. 5 and Mrs. | vivors: Brothers, John and Phillip. a a | = The Indianapolis Times

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ROAD 34 SKID IS FATAL

CRAWFORDSVILLE, Ind., Jan. 28 (U, P.).—Edward Hessel, 62, Champaign, Ill, was killed yesterday when his *%utomobile . skidded on icy Road 34 near Covington and crashed into a tree.

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Gets 1000 Letters

More than 1000 letters had reached Mr. Willkie’s hotel suite the past 24 hours from “men of the street,” inviting him to visit their homes, see how they were living and talk over the war with them. Many wanted to show him the bomb damage to their homes, and most urged, ‘Come and have tea with us and let us tell you about ourselves.” Mr. Willkiz planned to accept one or two of these invitations. The newspapers had told of his desire to talk ito -ordinary Britons. | Mr. Willkie described Churchill as “a most inspiring nian.” Harry L. Hopkins, Prélident Roosevelt’s person: representative in Britain, called on Mr. Willkie yesterday afternoon. It was leariied that Eire’s Prime Minister Earhon De Valera was sending him &n invitation to Dublin and that North Ireland industrialists were iriviting him to that country.

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Parkhur James Ray; four | ‘Mrs. Luella Carpenter, 74. urvivors: En “wo half-sisters. Sons, Charles and Harold daughters, Mrs.

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