Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 16 May 1941 — Page 4
* LIST CASH GIFTS |
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| Branch.
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“dents under the direction of the
program of work at the City Hos-
ERE RENT SPATE Doge HA SE TS
0a
PAGE 4
OF FOUNDATION
{Trustees Report Spending $106,016 for Charity and Education in 1940.
(Continued from Page One)
Will be geimbursed to the Founda‘tion from state funds. , A total of $9,844 was expended under the direction of the Public Health Nursing Association for the maintenance of two nurses for crippled children, two nurses for handicapped adults and ane nurse for chronic invalids. Scholarship aid was extended to 274 high school and 82 college stu-
Social Service Department of the “Indianapolis Public Schools. This was in the amount of $11,016.51, An additional appropriation of $1,806.81 was expended under the Same direction psychological and sight conservation services.
0 4500 “to Flanner House
"The Society for the Hard of HearIng received $850. Appropriation of $13,500 was made to the Children’s Bureau of the Indianapolis Orphan Asylum,
Under recreation and character building services, the foundation granted $1000 for extension -and .peighborhood programs during the summer months to the Phyllis Wheatley branch of the Y. W. C. A. end $660 .to the Neighborhood Camps Committee ‘under the auspices of the Y. W. C. A, Central
" The Flanner House was given $4500 for the maintenance of an expansion service pending its proposed campaign for a new building. . An appropriation of® $1200 was made to the Theodora Home CamPpaign under the direction of the {Volunteers of America, which pro- . ¥ides care for transient and home- " Jess women and children.
i . Grant to Hospital Guild
L. Under the Foundation’s health gervice appropriation, funds in the amount of $2500 were made ayailble to the Cancer Clinic of the City Hospital. This money was used for Imaintenance.of a clinician for demPnstration purposes. = St. Margaret's Hospital Guild #as granted $3783.33 for the supPort of its occupational therapy
.
pital, a service in which the Foundation has participated for a period of a year. Through its co-operative services, an appropriation of $25,000 was made to the 1940-41 Community Fund Campaign in the name of the donors to the Foundation and to express its co-operation with other Indianapolis sgcial agencies. The annual report showed that administrative expense during the year was $9382.40. Eugene C. To ter is Foundation director. Y Board of trustees is composed of J. K. Lilly, chairman; G. A. Efroymson, vice chairman; Thomas D. Sheerin, secretary; Eugene C. Miller, Walter Myers and K. K. Woolling. . The Foundation handles no money directly and makes no investments. It functions to disburse income and such portions of the principal as the donor may have directed to be expended.
CONNELY TO QUIT CHICAGO, May 16 (U. P.).—Emmett F. Connely formally announced here today that he will resign as president of the Investment Bank: ers Association of America when his
present term expires next December.
The Julia Jameson Camp builds healthy bodies.
Robison Post fo Present 25 Beds To the Jameson Health Camp
This might not be a true story— tion. Bruce P. Robison Postjof the and then again, it might. American Legion, partner of the InA frail freckled-face youngster|dianapolis Times in promoting climbed into a bus and was whisked [Golden Gloves, took $575 -of this away towards Bridgeport. His ribs|money and bought 25 new beds— showed. His complexion was sallow.|for the Julia Jameson Nutrition He spent the summer at the Julia|Camp—and will present them toJameson Nutrition Camp. His school [morrow night. principal and his family physician| In a few weeks another bunch of said it would do him a lot of good.|frail youngsters will climb into a It did. bus for Julia Jameson Camp. They He came home in time for school. ! SN the bs. thes: reed so badlv s ribs didn't On the new beds. Mis Tac gained ol To next fall a healdhier group of chil
The lad was on his way, dren.
Five years later the same young: | Meybe therell be « Golden, Gloves stér climbed again—into the ring at J : 3
Butler Field House. His shoulders, 7 were well-developed. His muscles] U.S. GROWS 0.21 PER CENT
were strong. WASHINGTON, May 16 (U. P.). He fought three furious rounds in|{_—_The U. S. Bureau of Census today a Golden Gloves match. We don’t|estimated the population of contiknow whether he won or lost. It|nental United States at 131,948,727 doesn’t matter. persons as of July 1, 1940, a gain But the crowd that cheered him,}of 0.21 per cent since the census of and the dozens like him, had paid|131,669,275 was completed in April,
to’see the healthy youngsters in ac-11940.
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-
iiss THE SUG TIMES
Is the Way Those Ribs Disappear
|6. M. PAY AE |
AVERTS STRIKE|
No Closed or Union Shop,
Peace Formula Says; Coal Talks at Crisis.
(Continued from Page One)
where 8500 U. A. W. members walked out yesterday ‘to push- demands for a wage increase of 10 cents an hour. The Hudson company holds $30,000,000 in defense orders. Five General Motors plants involved in unauthorized strikes remained closed despite efforts of union officials to notify members of the settlement in time for them to return to work. It was indicated the plants could not be, restored to full production before Monday.
| Nearly 39,000 workers still were idie
in the wildcat strikes. Meanwhile a War Department survey disclosed today that strikes affecting Army orders reached ar all-time high yesterday, with 33
_| strikes in progress involving 47,900
men. The previous peak was 20 strikes, involving 44,295 workers, on March 29. U. A. W.-C. I. O. Wciabers striking at the Ex-Cell-O Machine Tool Co. at Detroit ratified a Mediation
called May 6. On the Pacific Coast, Gov. Culbert Olson called a conference of union and employer representatives in an attempt to end the A.-P. L. and C. I. O. méchinists’ strike, which has closed 11 shipyards with $500,000,000 in defense orders. At La Porte, Ind., 950 strikers at the Allis Chalmers plant returned to work today as negotiations opened before a Mediation Board panel.
PRIORITIES AND RFC BILLS IN SENATE
ey will return.
WASHINGTON, May 16 (U. P.).— The Senate was expected to approve today two defense measures which would tighten the Administration’s control over armament measures
Iwhich would tighten the Adminis-
tration’s control production. One would empower President Roosevelt to exercise control over the flow of virtually all articles produced by American industry. *Fhe other would add $1,500,000,000. to funds of the Reconstruction Finance Corp. to finance the construction and operation of defense plants entirely at the agency’s discretion. As written, the priorities bill empowers the President to grade all supplies according to their importance to national defense and order their manuftcure and distribution to the armed forces before civilian demands are met. Mandatory priorities, now limited to defense contracts provided by the Navy “speed up” bill of 1940, would be extended to contracts negotiated under the British-Aid Act, to those awarded by the Maritime Commission and Coast Guard, and for civilian projects deemed necessary to national defense. Administration forces expected the most trouble from the RFC bill which has been denounced by Senator Robert A. Taft (R. Q.), as a “blank check” for the agéncy to construct “anything it pleases without authority from Congress.”
NAZIS ROUNDING UP "WHOLE HESS GANG
NITED PRE There vou little new today in the
strange case of*Rudolf Hess. Berlin officially denied that Prof, Karl Haushofer, No. 1 Nazi braintruster originator of the ‘“Lebensraum” ‘theory, and a close friend of Hess, had been arrested, but reliable sources said that 'the “whole outfit” was. being rounded up. The German propaganda line today was that Hess was creating a big headache in Britain and that Prime Minister Winston Churchill and Foreign Secretary Anthony Eden were afraid to see lxim. In London, it was said that Churchill would receive a detailed report on Hess, possibly today, from the Duke of Hamilton and Ivone Kirkpatrick, Foreign Office expert who have been closeted with the Nazi leader. According to London, “the true story of the Hess flight—as much as can be told now” is that he believed Germany invincible and that if he could talk personally to “a few men of good will’ in England he could end the war.
CYCLE TURNS OVER 6 TIMES, RIDER DIES
‘When he lost control of ‘his motorcycle nine miles south of Noblesville yesterday, ‘Richard L. Borrer, 23, of 924% Riviera Drive, was killed. State police were told that the cycle turned over six times, Mr. Borrer received a fractured skull and a broken neck. He died in an ambulance en route to the Hamilton County Hospital at Noblesville, Police said the accident occurred when Mr. Borrer, riding north toward Noblesville, attempted to pass a truck and trailer. As he swung out he saw a southbound auto driven by Ira Holmes, Indianapolis attorney. In attempting to swing back behind the truck he lost control of "his machine. Mr. Borrer operated the Ripple Tavern at 924 Riviera Drive. He is survived by his sister, Mrs. Walter Jenkins, Indianapolis, ‘and his father, Edward Borrer, Anderson. Funeral services will be Sunday in Muncie. Burial will be in - Winchester. .
Free to Resume His Honeymoon
The State Clemency Commission today paroled Ed Inman, 32-year-old “Noblesville man, whose honeymoon was. interrupted last fall by trouble with the law. Inman was sentenced to a term of one year in the State Reformatory in Hamilton Circuit Court for allegedly taking $20 from his landlady shortly after he married. The parole was recommended by the trial prosecutor. The Clemency Commission granted paroles to four others and denied the applications of 20 pris‘oners. It turned down requests
over armament
| for clemency from three drunk
“J.
Board proposal to settle their strike!’
ning. Lieut. Osipoff, Akron, O., and 11 other marines were the jumpers. As cach man left the plane, a rip cord fixed above the door auiomatically - opened his parachute. After each man, a bundle corfaining a machine ‘gun and ammunition was dropped, also by parachute.
When Lieut. Osipoff stepped up, only thre¢ men were left in the plane. Eecfore he was ready to jump, a gun bundle slipped loose, caught him and pulled him out. . But he didn’t fall free.
were watching from the North Island naval station. Here is what happered, in the words of Lieut. Lowrey, Mr. McCants and
bay from shock and a cut under his armpit that took 25 stitches to close: * (Lieut. Lowrey’s version:) ‘We went up to 500 feet and there met the transport. I tried to get under it but the air was too bumpy, so I signaled.the pilot of the transport to climb and head for the ocean where I knew it would be smonther. “He did and ‘I signaled when we got .into a quiet layer of air. I then made the second attempt.
“I eased i.p to the transport on the left “sice. It was ke flying in formatica. I got ‘ony (in position with! the left wifig of the big ship , and ‘then slipped in under Osit off’s body. Then MecCants did -1l the hard work. “He had his knife out and as Osipoff d:opped into the rear cockpit, McCants began cutting the shrouds. (Modest and deference to a fellow oricef forkhade Lowrey telling here that Osipoff became hysterical, Cants in 2 death grip and that he «—Lowrey--saved the day by turn-
invasion practice yesterday eve--
Lieut. Lowrey and Mr. McCants.
Osipoff, wha is recovering in sick
Lieut, :
eized Mec- .
(Continued from Page One)
ing the plane’s nose up in a vertical climb, making the propeller cut the shrouds.) “I pulled back the stick and. raised the ship so the propeller would help cut the shrouds,” Lowrey continued. ° “Then came the only bad part of the whole ‘experience, it seems to me. When the last of the: shrouds were cut the wind whipped them around the tail of our plane. We had some hectic moments trying to handle the plane, before we landed it on the Navy field. During those moments it seemed to me we might end in a disaster.” - " (McCants’ version was brief?) “When Lieut. Osipoff dropped into the cockpit he was still ¢onscious and he grabbed me around the waist in what might be called a ‘death’s grip,’ it was so tight. 1 don’t think I could have shaken him off if IT had wanted to. I hacked at the ropes but Lieut, Lowrey whipped the plane up and we were free in a few seconds.” (Lieut. Osipoff’s version:) “I was waiting my turn to jump when suddenly I was jerked off my feet and out the open door. “The motors hurled me back. When the shrouds of my ‘chute snapped taut I thought I would lose consciousness, but the cold air blowing back into my.face seemed to revive me. ‘It seemed like houfs that I dangled head down. “Several things occurred to me as I trailed along behind the plane. Even if the worst happened, I thought, somebody would benefit by getting my insurance. “The men in the plane tried to’ pull me back in, but they couldn’t | reach me. | Then I saw the rescue plane flying toward us. When I saw the little open | trainer motion © the transport out to sea I knew
they were going to try to cut me
slipstream of the, big
i 7b SET,
FRIDAY, MAY 16, 1041
Two Novy Clie ‘Who Risked Five Lives
To Save Parachutist Are Cited for Heroism
loose after getting me in the plane.
“After we, got over the ocean: where it wasn’t so bumpy the other plane flew up and over me. I. somehow wasn’t afraid any longer. Then J came into contact ‘with the ‘wing of the plane. I remember a sort of sinking feeling when I slipped off the.wing and the shrbuds again snapped 4aut. “Finally the little plane was directly below me. As it rose, I feared ‘it would strike the tail of the transport. Then I fell into the cockpit into the arms of MecCants. I put a death grip on him and I don’t believe anything could have pried me loose. “After I had fallen head first down in the cockpit, everything went® black. I don’t remember anythirig more until’ I came to in Sick Bay.” * Other fliers pointed out that the slightest miscalculation on Lowrey’s part, or a sudden draft would have caused a collision that probably would have killed all the men in and undet both planes. One flier said, “Lowrey staked everything on a rescue. It was rescue him or be a bum. He might have been court-martialed.”
ADMIRAL FORGETS’ “ORDERS TO OFFICERS
PHILADELPHIA (U. P.).—Orders are orders at the Philadelphia Navy yard—and that goes for everyone froni the commandant on down.. Rear Admiral A. E. Watson, yard commandant, issued. an order that required all officers receiving visitors to sigh their full names to the
First officer in the yard to forg the rule was—Rear Admiral Watson.
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