Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 20 August 1941 — Page 10

PAGE 10

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

GOP MAPS FIBHT New School Building for 400 Pupils

ON VOTE BOARDS

Party Leaders Meet Consider Plans for Saving New Law.

to

leaders from Indiana's

can

| i 3 Republ 3 seven largest counties met today at the Claypool Hotel to map party procedure in regard to the new vot-! ers’ registration law which has been | : attacked in a suit filed in Lake; § County. The new law, passed by the G. O.

P.-dominated ‘41 Legislature, pro-

vides for the appointment of a two- | Oaklandon, Castleton and Lawrence. Approximately 400 pupils are expected to enroll for the fall term.

man bipartisan registration board in the seven counties. The Circuit Court judges are to make the appointments on the respective recommendations of the

Republican and Democratic county PRICE POLICIES chairmen. (Registration in these]

counties is now under the direction | —

Urge Congress to Reject

of the county clerk. In the case testing the new law. Judge C. B. Jenkins of the Lake Su-| perior Court has issued a temporary | Plan for 110 Pct. of restraining order prohibiting Circuit it Court judges in all the counties from Parity Ceiling. making the appointments. A hearing to determine whether the order | ~picAGO, Aug. 20 (U. P.) —Five <hall b . is sched- | 3 : rh Jae puter i ‘hundred farm leaders from 40 ian Kiehtel 4 4 {states asked Congress today to reThe circuit court judges in Allen. |~ ; 8 110 pet cent of pars Vanderburgh and St. Joseph Coun- ject a propos pe Se on ties have refused to recognize valid-|jty price-ceiling on farm products

ity of the order as it applies tolyntj) a “perfect balance” is estab-, lished between farm prices and in-|°

them and they have appointed voter registration boards. Li Todav’s meeting was called by | Ralph Gates, state G. O. P. chair- | man. Invited to attend were the | ronnie hair vors f re bets rg a A lation, the group denounced rigid es hast Tore. Vio S Fon: | price fixing under any conditions. son, Al , Lake, V ) . S | . Vanderburgh and Marion. lo The meeting A James Bradford. Marion County Department of Agric T LY oad G. O. P. chairman, was one of the methods of Ee abdern leaders in getting the new law urged nee o ation passed by the legislature. This law method of calc : takes control of the registration Policy Drafted machi ver } : s. . Cite machinery from the county clerk | A nine-point statement of policy

FORT FUND APPROVED ‘was approved by the meeting: Times Special | 1. Opposition to legislation deWASHINGTON, Aug. 20—Sena- signed to freeze prices on farm comtor Frederick VanNuyvs (D. Ind.) to- |modities. day announced that the President] 2 Opposition to the Doughton had approved expenditure of $244.- ltariff bill which would permit sus791 in WPA funds for buildings and | pension of import duties on foreign grounds improvements at the Bill- |meats and livestock. ings General Hospital at Ft. Har-| 3 oghdemnation of proposed rison. The project is sponsored bY eqty with Argentina as a “device gE pry to weaken sanitary protection” gainst diseased livestock.

a PERMANENT . 4. Approval of a proposed perma(nent system of sanitary inspection OIL WAVE |for imports of animals and their GUARANTEED { products.

BY EXPERTS | 5. Opposition to Government enNat. Ady. Waves $1.50. $2. £2.50, st [J couragement to producers of syn-

thetic foods as compared to natural Central Beauty College products, particularly of oleomar209 0dd Fellow Bldg. LI-9321.

|garine as a substitute for butter. Fear Milk Shortage

6. A request for Government action to avert threatening milk and ‘cream shortages through unco-

ustrial wages. Attending a national emergency conference called by the National Co-operative Milk Producers’ Feder-

Special

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PHONE MA 4455 FOR A

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The new consolidated Lawrence Township High School building at 59th St. near Ft. Harrison, has been completed. Built with the aid of WPA labor, it will consolidate the junior and senior high schools from |

| Rinehart Rites At 3 Tomorrow

! Services for William H. Rine- | hart, chief clerk at the Illinois Central Freight House. will be held at 3 p. m. tomorrow at the Flanner & Buchanan Mortuary Mr. hart, aa of East Lynn, i Ne 111, died Mon- ! day at his of- ‘ fice, 301 W. SS ; South St. He ! : = was 58. He | SE & had lived here TN for many years at 2814 N Capitol Ave. He was 8 member of Monroe Lodge 22, Free & Accepted Masons, and of the Bloomington Mason chapter and was a member of the Bloomington Chamber of Commerce and of the Rotary Club of that city. He was also a member of the First Pres- { byterian Church of Bloomington.

Rinea native

Mr. Rinehart

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FRED BAILEY'S

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Veteran Railroad Postal Clerk Stricken on Run Through Kankakee.

Funeral services for Fred Bailey, railroad postal clerk for 31 years, will be held Friday at 2 p. m. in the Jordan Funeral Home. | Mr. Bailev, who was 58, lived at 13553 Graceland Ave. and had been on the Chicago-Indianapolis mail run for the past 15 years. He had been employed by the Government since 1910. Railroad officials said that Mr. {Bailey had become ill yesterday morning while the train was passring through Kankakee, Ill, and died a short time later. He was a native of Greenfield and

In the Service Now— {

LOCAL MARINE “ENDS FURLOUGH

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Private Michael Renten Ir. Returns to Duty at San Diego Base.

| Private First Class Michael Ren-| ten Jr. of the United States Marine] {Corps Reserve has just returned to | ‘the Marine Corps Base at San | Diego after spending a furlough at| | home with his parents, Mr. and Mrs, | | Michael Renten, 28 McLean Place. | | Pfc. Renten is a former member {of the 16th Battalion, U. S. M. C. R.| | which was in Indianapolis before] | being called out for active duty last| October. He says that the battalion | is pretty well scattered now; some of the boys are in Iceland with the | American force. ! | Before he left Indianapolis, Pfc. Renten was a student at Broad] | Ripple High School. He is 20 and| an expert rifleman. His outfit is Company C, First Battalion, the Eighth Marines, at San Diego.

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Praise State Soldiers

Indiana boys make good soldiers. The Indiana Regiment of the 139th! Field Artillery drew high praise from the Fifth Army Corps officer, Col. John M. McDowell, when he] reported to the corps chief of staff] on the preliminary maneuvers of | the outfit. | | “The staff organization and func-| tioning was very satisfactory; reconnaissance was prompt and thor- | ough and fires were well co-ordinat-| ed,” stated Col McDowell. “The alertness of all officers and men was reflected in prompt execution of appropriate tasks. All enlisted men seemed to participate in the combat with a greater degree of enthusiasm and intentness than I have observed in any other division.”

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WEDNESDAY, AUG. 20, 1941

3 NAVY FLIERS DIE IN MID-AIR CRASH

PENSACOLA, Fla., Aug. 20 (U. P)—Two Navy training planes, flying blind by instruments, collided at 4500 feet several miles from the Naval Air station yesterday, killing three fliers. Second Lieut. George Axtell, of Baden, Pa. an instructor, escaped death by making a parachute landing. The dead were Lieut, William J. Sisko, 35, Pontiac, Mich., Naval Aviation Cadet Edwin Holt, 22, Pearl River, N. Y., and Cadet Cassin M. Thomas, 22, of Teemoore,

| Cal.

OPA-LOCKA, Fla, Aug. 20 (U, P).—Two aviation cadets in training at the Naval Air station here

| were killed yesterday’ when their

plane went into a spin and crashed in the Everglades 15 miles from here.

RN

Croatian Terrorist Band

WPA PLANS SECOND

Ousts U.S. Consul at Zagreb BURNS CITY PROJECT

By EDGAR ANSEL MOWRER

Copyright, 1941, by The Indianapolis Times and The Chicago Daily News, Inc.

WASHINGTON, Aug. 20.—How Croatian Ustachis, or members of the same secret terrorist organization that murdered King Alexander of Jugoslavia and French Foreign Minister Louis Bathou in 1934, cooperated with the Germans and Italians in driving out American diplomatic and consular representatives abroad, has become known through the experiences of American Consul John J. Meily at Zagreb. At 1 o'clock, on the afternoon of June 22, an Ustachi member, posing as a policeman, walked into the American consulate and handed Consul Meily a communication. It said: “I have been ordered by the (rebel Croatian) Government to ask you to close the American consu-

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u | The Indiana WPA will begirf, late and for all American employees, ahout Oct. 1, its second largest proj= including yourself, to leave Croatian |ect at Burns City, site of the U. S. territory by July 15. Navy's East Coast Ammunition DeHalf an hour later, the head of pot, it was announced today. the Ustachis and eight assistants| The latest project calls for ex arrived to take possession of the | penditure of $188,854 for road conconsulate. Neither the consul nor [struction and ground improvement his clerks were allowed to leave the at the 75-mile square area. The premises. Files were ransacked and | first WPA project, which is partially some papers and other material car-| completed, included the clearing and ried away. |grubbing of 100 miles of roadway At 4 o'clock in the afternoon, two and 50 miles of railroad right-of-other Ustachis escorted the consul| Way, landscaping, grading, sodding

to his home. There his personal pa- and planting of trees and shrubpers were searched. |bery. At present, 630 WPA workers

| The next day the consul was met |2T® employed.

at the consulate door by the police | oo rp FIRMS GET CONTRACTS

who removed the seals they had placed on the door. The guards| WASHINGTON, Aug. 20.— Tok= then entered the consulate and con-|heim Oil Tank and Pump Co., Ft, tinued the search of the American |Wayne, was awarded an Army cons files and records. The following day, |tract for $2,096,870 worth of bomb at noon, the American flag was bodies today, and the U. S. Machine hauled down and the consulate|Corp., Lebanon, a contract for $1,closed. 1259,000 worth of shells.

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|crdinated efforts to supply dry milk | | solids, evaporated milk and cheese i large quantities to Britain and | Survivors include his wife, Ruby. allies. jand two daughters, Mae Mar- | 7. A demand for removal of the gyerite and Billie Bailey, both of

The 139th Field Artillery is commanded by Col. Louis L. Roberts. Evansville,

MORRIS

was a member of Calvin Prather *

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consumers’ counsel in the Department of Agriculture on grounds that lit is unfriendly to the interests of | agriculture. 8. Advocacy of greater agricul-

ON CHARACTER OR AUTO J tural representation in Government

WITHOUT ENDORSERS Borrow $75 10 $5,000 * & to 20 Months to Poy ® § Weeks to Make 1st Payment

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| parity. 9. Sympathetic presentation of farm problems to the American pub|lic to obtain support for agriculture.

Attachments

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Indianapolis

$200,000 CITY FUND APPROVED BY STATE

The State Tax Board today ap{proved the $200,000 appropriation voted recentiy by City Council from gasoline tax funds, except for a] $2000 item to increase the salaries of 35 motorcycle policemen. Action on the $2000 salary itent was held in abeyance pending an opinion which City officials are to] (obtain from their legal department] las to whether salaries can be increased during the year.

!

Organizations

| Officer Managers to Meet—The Indianapolis Chapter of the Na(tional Office Management Associa-| [tion will meet tomorrow at Holly-| {hock Hill, 8110 College Ave. There] will be a round-table discussion of imodern office proktlems. Members land guests are invited to bring their | wives.

Club Meets Tomorrow—Belmont Townsend Club No. 4 will meet at 7:30 p. m. tomorrow at 47 S. Holmes Ave.

ANDERSON —- Edward W. Hancock, 59 Survivors: Wife, Mary; daughters, Mrs Chester Creegar., Mrs. Clarence Michael, Mrs. Lavon Haines, Misses Georgianna iJune Ardith Hancock; Samuel; stepsons, Forest, Bert, Spencer Judd. | Mrs. Martha M. Clem, 42. 3 | Husband, Eldon: sons, Donald, Robert Julilick: parents, Mr. and Mrs. Henry Breyer. | BIRDSEYE—Mrs Minerva Ellen Erp, 83 | CRAWFORDSVILLE Miss Marv B. | Grubb, 73. Survivors: Sister, Mrs. Laura | Hose: brother, Walter Grubb. DUNREITH—Herbert Hughes, 58. Survivors: Wife, Nora; brother, Harold.

70. Survivors: Sisters, Mrs. William Wick|ard, -Miss Ethel Shickley, Mrs. Effie Condo, | Mrs. Ida Hiatt; brother, Dorris Shickley. EVANSVILLE — Herman S. Crowley, 53. isurvivors: Wife, Elsie; sons, Freeman, { Elmer; sisters, Mrs. Ben Corbett, Mrs. | Garfield Bethel, Mrs. Ludie O'Nan, Mrs. {Ida O'Nan. | Charles Curtis Camp Sr., 73 i ; daughter, Mrs. , Charles Jr., Marlin; rison, Mace, John. Oliver Wiizbacher, 90. |ters, Mrs. John Sauer, {Mrs. Joseph Winiger, |bacher; sons, Aloys, Florian, Albert. FT. WAYNE—Walter

brothers,

John Ulrich Helen

Mrs. Miss William,

W. Luttan, 47.

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| STATE DEATHS

Survivors:

ELWOOD — Mrs. Cora Leona Benedict, |

Teach War Economics

Those who are interested in the problems of financing a major war. may find the answer in a new course offered by the Butler University Evening School for the next year. | The course is “The Economics of War,” and will be taught by Dr.| Merwyn G. Bridenstine of the Col-| lege of Business Administration. It will concern the economic sacri-| fices necessary for the prosecution | of a war and the political measures) whereby the belligerent state re-| shapes its economy to ends of war-| fare. i Another course, dealing with the

{study of the youth services in our

hich schools. is to be taught by John A. Mueller. a lecturer in ths College of Education. Registration for the evening school is to be held from Sept. 8 to 13.

ACCIDENT VICTIM DIES

John Murrell of New Philadelphia, O., died last night in Witham Hospital, Lebanon, Ind. of injuries re-

ceived in an auto accident Monday. | Mr. Murrell, who was 51, lost control of his car on Detour Road 32 near Advance, Ind., and crashed

{into a culvert.

Mrs sons

Harley

|berry. Survivors: Daughters Hugh,

Rambo, Mrs. Martha Sprague | James | KINGMAN—Mrs. Ella Steinbaugh, Survivors: Sons, James, Robert, LOUISVILLE—William C. Stillinger. 75 Survivors: Sisters, Miss Florence Stillinger, Mrs Louella Chambers, Mrs. Hannah Overstreet: brothers, Fred,. Everett. MOUNT VERNON—Arthur William RBayer. 46 Survivors: Wife, Elizabeth; sons, | Paul C.. Arthur W. Jr.; daughter, Mrs. | { Henry Lang: mother, Mrs. Mary M. Bayer, | | sisters, Mrs. G. Arthur Schreiber, Misses { Helen, Lula Bayer. | | MUNCIE—Mrs. Ona E. Snodgrass, 48. | MIDDLEBURY—Samuel M. Miller, wl. | | Survivors: Wife, Lydia: brothers, Levi, ! { William, Moses, Christ: sisters, Mrs, Lizzie | Christner, Mrs. Christ Troyer. | NEW ROSS — Charles Elmer Gott, Survivor: Wife, Bertha. | ROCKPORT—Mrs. Julia Ann Igert,

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Survivors: Mary Banks; (daughters, Mrs. Xonia Rudisil, Mrs. Ovia

Har-| Wangler. . | SOMERSET—Homer Huddleston. 59. SurSurvivors: Daugh- | yviyors: Three brothers; three sisters. Wilz- | SULLIVAN—The Rev. Leonard,

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