Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 20 October 1941 — Page 2

PURDUE SETS

HOMECOMING

Grads to Return This Week-

End for 3-Day Event; Honor 1916 Players.

Times Special LAFAYETTE, Ind, This week-end is homecoming for] “Purdue University grads.

Gala plans have been made for the event, one of the highlights of “the scholastic year, which will be .plimaxed by the Boilermaker grid

Oct. 20—]%

Aron clash with Iowa University at]

p. m. Saturday. Opening the homecoming activi-

will be the annual alumni ban-|S

? ot Friday night at which a three-|

way Spotlight will be focused on Prof.:P. S. “Spots” Emrick, director “of .the Purdue Band. since: 1805; six 81 the menwers of the 1916 football squad who will be. celebrating their 25th anniversary, and members of the University . Concert ¢ Choir, celebrating the 10th anniLyersary . of that organization.

; Honor Lettermen The six senior lettermen from

the 1016 eleven who: will be hone | pred are Paul H. Hake, superintend- | &8 sent of building and road mills, | TS

Youngstown Sheet Youngstown, O.; Richard T. Abrell, ’ foreign manager and vice president ~the: Ohmer International Corp. | New -York City; Raymond C. Ar- “% puckle, vocational agriculture teachn+@¢ at: Noblesville; Oharles A. Buech“mer, : district manager for the Ohio Oil Co, at Robinson, Ill; Melvin J. * w=. Proud, - agricultural ‘manager for Allis-Chalmers at: Memphis, Tenn. arner B, ‘VanAken, florist at

asium pool in the afternoon es in the womien’s gymna-

: 3 ne banquet will be followed by a oth pep session, the annual ming dance. and preliminary ding of fraternity and sorority

decors, ine alumni will be taken campus tours Saturday mornand various class luncheons will held at noon, including organ Ration ‘meetings for the. 07; 12, ’17, ‘32 ‘and '37 classes which i te ‘perfecting plans for their * i reunions at Gala Week next spring, |

.-Following the game, members {i of the various classes -will meet + under banners on the gridiron for wainformal get-togethers --and then ui um, to the Memorial Union

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leased by the U, 8. Navy. The U.

A naval observation plane, after a search for submarines, is swing aboard a U. S. cruiser en route to Iceland in this official ‘photo re-

S. 8. Kearny ‘was engaged in simi-

lar patrol work Friday when she was torpedoed by a submarine. °

go into the war and wipe the German submarines forever from the sea,” he said. “If I were young enough I would like to help do this job. The Germans are nothing but a bunch of sea pirates and should be eradicated from the face of the earth, stamped out like a dirty disease.” .

PHILADELPHIA, Oct. 20. (U. P.). ~Mrs. Catherine LaFleur, 21, whom Lloyd Dalton LaFleur married last year when he was stationed at the Philadelphia : Naval Hospital, lives with her parents. “I still have hope,” she said. “He may have been picked: wr i

PYLE, DWIGHT FLOYD, seaman, second class, Bainbridge, Ga. BAINBRIDGE Ga. Oct. 20 (U. P.) —A. Pyle, his father, a bowlin| alley operator, is next of kin. Mr, Pyle said his son enlisted in the Navy at Albany, Ga. five months ago. Three sisters, a brother and his step-mother also survive. Mr. s | Pyle said he had: not yet received official notification and had no comment, STOLTZ, IRAL WILLIAM, fireman, first class, Spangler, Pa.

SPANGLER, Pa., Oct. 20 (U, P.). —Mrs. Mary Stoltz, his widowed

comment, as she went to Baltimore Saturday to be at the bedside or a seriously ill sister. Said Olan Stoltz, 23, one of Ir seven’ ‘brothers and sisters: “We still have hope that they'it find him—or his body at least. We would like to have him home with us, no matter how. I guess there isn’t anything more I can say.”

Others missing were listed as: Floyd Andrew Camp, ship's cook,

The it FE

first class, National City, Cal.

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‘The Next of Kin . . . . Have Been Notified"

(Continued from Page One)

“os

Luther Asle Curtis, water oer, first class, Wilmington, N. Russell Burdick Wade, ena first class, Houston, Ala. Harry Tull Young, machinist’s mate, second class, Réader, Ark,

Critically injured:

Samuel - R. Kuriz, orpedomag, third class, Erie, Pa.

Seriously injured:

Leonard Frontakowski, chief boatswain’s- mate, Norfolk, Va.

Names of the eight men with minor injuries were not revealed.

YOUNG, HARRY TULL, maChjsiste’ mate, first class, Reader, I.

READER, Ark. Oct, 20 (U. P.) — Ira Young, railroad fireman, said today he had not been officially notified that- his son was missing aboard the U, 8S. 8S. Kearny. He said the seaman’s wife, who lives: in “Norfolk, Va., may have been notified. “I wish I could get some official word,” the elder Mr, Young said. “I wish.I could go.to the Navy. I am ready to'go now, if it would avenge my son.

~ WADE, RUSSELL BURDICK, fireman, third class, Houston, Ala,

‘DOUBLE SPRINGS, Ala. Oct.20 (U.P) ~Sheriff W. M, Bonds said today that the parents of 20-year old "Weide “haven't given up hope;

yet” fi

‘He -#isited them, Mr. ang Mrs. Amon: Wade, at their farm home eight miles from here last night. “They didn’t have much to say about it,” he said. The Wades, who own “a ‘nice farm” a mile south of Houston, | have several other chilren. -

CURTIS, LUTHER ASLE, water tender, first class, Wilmington, N.C.

WILMINGTON, N. O., Oct. 20 (U. P.)—Next of kin is J. H. Curtis, an uncle, who said he had not been notified of his nephew’s- death by the Navy Department.

CAMP, FLOYD A ANDREW, ship's cook, National City, Cal.

. NATIONAL CITY, Cal, Oct. 20 (U. P.)~City ofticials said the Camp family moved from here several months ago and no forwarding address.

NEW DRIVE BEGUN ON FALSE ALARMS

Three more false fire alarms spurred police and fire prevention uthorities today in their campaign to end a practice which only recently cost the life of an Indianapolis fireman. The alarms were turned in yesterday at 12th and West Sts., at 11th St. and Brookside Ave. and ‘at Ninth and Camp Sts. The fireman was killed when the pumper he was riding collided with 8 ek. The alarm proved to be alse,

Ar SA. FOOD DIFFICULTIES FACED BERN, Oct. 20 (C. D. N.) —An indication of food difficulties in former Jugoslavia is seen i the order by She Serbian Economi autho g previously prohibited slaughter of horses for 2 as horse meat, according to an account in today’s bund of Bern.

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‘News

| Case: Strike Looms At Bell Plant.

By UNITED PRESS

faced the two-fold threat of mass

| picketing by 250,000 C. I. O. union=| ists at the Bendix, N. J., plant of

Air Associates, Inc. and a strike authorization affecting 10,000 employees of the Bell Aircraft Corp. at Buffalo and Niagara Falls, N. Y, The 2-day od ish dispute affecting t accessories

|manufacture of aircraf

DE ars as the lap of .the Office of uction Management—with Pri:sidential action a possibility—by th¢ company’s rejection of National Defense Mediation Bodrd recommendations, ' NDMB’s announcement yesterday that the company’s offer to reinstate “strikers “within 30 days” constituted a rejection of the board’s proposal for immediate rehiring brought an immediate declaration from the aircraft division of the C. I. O, United = Automobile Workers that plans for mass picket-

' |ing ‘would “go forward.”

The company contends its plant is in full operation with all but 50 of a company estimate of 150 ay strikers back at work. On receipt of the company’s answer, the Mediation-Board turned the dispute over to OPM. NDMB has listed the Bendix dispute as one of seven most critically affecting defense production: ; Authorization of a strike call at the Bell aircraft plants, which make

ceptor planes for Great Britain and the United States, was voted at a mass meeting of C. I. O. aircraft workers yesterday. The authorization specified that a strike should not be called until “all other means” of reaching agreement have been exhausted. - The union is asking a general wage boost. Partially counteracting these new threats aircraft production was the restoration of company-union peace at Consolidated Aircraft Corp., San. Diego, Cal.

ALLISON CAMERA CLUB WILL ELECT

The Allison Camera Club will elect new officers and complete preparations for its annual inauguration banquet next week at a meeting tonight in the Marott Hotel. The slate of candidates includes Peter Perish and Nathan Holbrook for president, Herschel Featherston d George Leiendecker for vice president and Albert ‘Warheit, Henry Stanton and Oscar Montieth for secretary-treasurer. At the banquet "next Monday night, the new officers will be anNouced and jhe Fonpers of the on © 0! will be presented with ptography Judges for the salon exhibit will be’ Joseph Craven, president of the Photographers’ Assoc Associa Lys yh dS 0 of hn the Int and Elmer Taflinger, local iphes Present officers of the club are Robert - Rogers, president; LeRoy] .

Shutts, secretary, and Neil Mc treasurer. Banlly,

RAVENSWOOD. FIRE DESTROYS TAVERN

«A fire early yesterday in Ravenswood destryoed a tavern and a bathhouse, and damaged the Wharf House and a giocery, store. Of undetermined origin, the fire forced Mr. and Mrs. Al Fox to flee from their quarters above “the Wharf House. Mr. Fox is Ravenswood marshal. The fire started in a building at 7303 Ravenswood Blvd. and destroyed a tavern operated by Wil liam Barrett, with a loss of about

It spread fo a bathhouse next door which also was destroyed. The loss was unestimated. Damage to the Wharf House was placed at $400. The heat caused $100 damage to a grocery store owned by Roy pasture. Firemen from Engine Housé No. 32 at Broad Ripple fought the blaze, pumping water from White River.

PROMOTION 1S GIVEN LIEUT.-COL. METHVEN

Lieut. Col. Theron G. Methven, commander of .the 201st Infantry (West Virginia National Guard) which was stationed at Ft. Harrison last spring, has been promoted to the temporary rank of Colonel, according to a War. Department announcement. The 201st Infantry left FM. Harrison for a camp in Washington State several months ago. It is believed that, the regiment will eventually be stationed in Alaska,

JEWISH LEADER DIES

' CINCINNATI, O., Oct, 20 (U. P). —Dr. Edward L. Israel, 45, Baltimore, died of a heart attack yesterday a few minutes before he was to be installed as executive director of the union of American Hebrew congregations. He was rabbi at Springfield, Il., and Ind, 1919 to 1923

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Randolph Field mechanics begin taking planes out of storage as pilot training at the Gulf Coast Air Corps Center rolls into high gear. Put on shelf during the construction of new fields, the planes will now see plenty of service with thousands of young Americans waiting to give them a workout.

ISENNTE APPLIES

SHIP ARMS ‘GAC’

Hearings Open Tomorrow: Avenge Kearny Deaths, Connally Demands.

(Continued from Page One)

Senate to vote on a declaration of war with Germany. : Prior to the meeting Mr. Gobial ly demanded that American sailors and ships “shoot and shoot to kill” to avenge the “murderous and foul crime” against the U, 8, de-

-|stroyer Kearny.

Senator Connally commented on’

the Kearny incident for the supporters of President Roosevelt's foreign policy: “This murderous and foul crime shall be avenged. Our vessels ought to sink every submarine in our defensive waters. It is g revelation of the utter contempt of Hitler and his Nazi terrorism for all law, hu-

Bl .|man and divine. We shall not toler-

(Continued from Page One)

an audience of 1100 understand the shape of what he sees in store for this country. “I b you bad news,” he said. “Very.bad news. Don't hate me for it. Hate Hitler.” His audience listened carefully as Mr. Whitaker said: “That all of Hitler's strategy since the fall of 1940 trom the attempted invasion of Africa to the Russian adventure is based on oné objective: The United States. and Russia can be defeated.” “Where can the war be won?” the audience asked him in the question period which followed. It was the one question the correspondent. had not answered. He came forward again, apologizing. He had forgotten it in the address, perhaps because it appeared so obvious to him. “This war will be won in lectiire halls like these” he said, “This democracy is being tested. Unless we can make a decision that we must meet this threat, unless this country achieves real unity, ‘unless it produces an Army capable of defeating in the field a strong, opposing military force—Germany will win the war. “It is my opinion that Germany can invade Britain. Germany would have a 70 to 30 chance of succeeding in an invasion of the British Isl - “What could the United States do?” the YidieneS asked, 3.80. “It could send. two.-mechaniged ; | divisions to to French. Morocco, The day “that those’ two divisions arrived, 400,000 leaderless Frenchmen would arise as a man against Hit ler,” answered Whitaker. “The United States could Sispaich

For the

Only U.S. Stands in Way of Hitler's World Conquest, Whitaker Says at Forum

half its available air force to ‘the Caucusus Mgquntains. And high above those passes which Hitler will soon try to force, to reach the Baku oil fields, American flying fortresses could destroy a German Army.”

- Germany invaded Russia for two reasons, he said. First, to destroy the Russian Army as ah effective military force. Second, to possess] the rich resources of the Soviet Union. Why? he asked. So that Germany wiil soon be in a position to strike at the United States, It is for this reason and this alone, he. said, that Africa is essential to the Nazis, From African bases, they would be able to strike fanwise across the Atlantic and destroy U. S. shipping. As a sidelight excursion, he .said, the Germans will undoubtedly march into Spain and Portugal and attempt another—and possibly successful—invasion of Africa, . Without effective U. 8S. aid, he said, Russia, with Japan attacking from the rear, may soon be. lost. How could America be invaded? Possibly not for a decade. directly; answered the Sortesonden, But Hitler could outbuild U. shipyards with the resources of ip .The interim would be a long and exhausting war on land and sea. America eventually may be defeated. Will Germany collapse? ; Not likely, answered the correSponfibnt. Hitler has made war pay. y. the German armament has gs Pad for with 30 Dillion. dots worth of loot seized from quered nations, Germany ® won't collapse until Hitler suffers 4 military defeat. “The one totalitarian system in

the world today that works is Nazi-

ism,” he said.” “Like Mohammed, Hitler has created a new religion. He has fulfilled his historical mission and if he dies tomorrow, Germany would still go on imbued with the idea that Germans are the master race.” It was after the lecture that the correspondent told a story. He had {to use his hands to tell it to convey the idea for which even he could find no language. Mr, Whitaker wanted to interview a French colonial general to determine whether the Morrocean ‘French ‘were capable of making a stand. Since he could not prs Morocco because of the gestapo, the correspondent sent a French colleague, ’ Thé general replied, said Mr. Whitaker, that against the Italians or the Spanish or a combination of both, the French could hold out. Against German mechanized troops, the French colonials would meet disaster, he said. The general was an old man, but still a great soldier, Mr. Whitaker said. ‘And he told the correspondent’s agent this: “The United States is a big country, not a great one. I think it is capable of winning the war and one day it will fight because the Germans will . turn on it. It is very rich. “If the United States. would send troops, éven here, it would mean that the heart of every Frenchman everywheré would’, At this point, Mr. Whitaker made a motion with his hands, & turning, upward ' motion signifying. a great upsurge ‘of hope. “And,” the correspondent finished softly, “the peoples of Europe would

ate the assassination of our sailors: and destruction of our ships. They will shoot and shoot to kill” Senator. Wheeler called for a “thorough investigation” of the incident. by the Senate Naval Affairs Committee. ; “If the Germans are shooting at our ships that is a very serious mat» ter,” he said. “If the Kearny was chasing a German submarine, as was tho case in the Greer attack, the Senate should know about it.”

.. YanNuys Urges Cautjon

Senator Frederick VanNuys (D. Ind.) thought’ the Keamy incident was “regrettable”. but not one to alarm the public “because the ate tack was invited by the sending of the Kearny into the war zone with out a declaration of war.” The Navy said the destroyer was torpedoed 350 miles south and west of Iceland. Administration leaders in the House, where the armed ship bill was approved 259 to 138 last Friday, denounced the attack on the Kearny as evidence that “the Axis pincer movement is on.”

Bloom Slams Germans

Chairman Sol Bloom (D. N. Y.) of the House Foreign Affairs Come mittee said it demonstrates that the Germans “are a lot of mad men both on land and sea who do the most despicable things without re gard to life or property.” House Democratic Leader John W, McCormack of Massachusetts charged that it was “an overt act of intimidation by the German Gov=ernment” in concert with the Japanese cabinet shakeup “to bring pressure on the United States in the Atlantic and the Pacific.” House Republican Leader Joseph W. Martin Jr. of Massachusetts pre= ferred to withhold comment until a full Navy report was available. One of the men who helped fili« buster to death President Wilson's ship arming bill-Senator George W. Norris (Ind. Neb.), announced that he would vote for this one.

OLDEST BRITON IS 114

NORTH RIVER, ‘Newfoundland, Oct. ‘20 WW. P.)~Mrs. Ellen Carroll, believed to be the oldest: person in the British Empire, observed her 114th birthday anniversary today. She has lived under seven

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