Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 5 November 1941 — Page 20

a Is Erstar Now ROME, Nov. 5 (U. P)—Italy, § for its olive oil, got inons today how to produce at home an ersatz product .by stewing linseed with water; bouillon cubes, saffron, salt and vine-

concoction, said n Piccolo, |

be boiled half an hour. iding a or two of To oil, said the paper, a housewife can produce 8 substitute that tastes and looks like

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Color rich rayon velvets for holiday dress affairs.

WILLKIE READY

Purge Isolationists "From G.-0. P.,” Will Be Reply, : Associates Say.

"By LYLE WILSON | United Press Staff Correspondent ' |

dell L. Wilkie’s reply to. Con=

gressional Republicans who would {2 read him out of the party will be a demand that the G. O. P. purge itself of isolationists and become the party of against Hitler. Close associates outlined his po= sition here today. He is represented as being ready to welcome & showdown with the isolationist group which is endeavoring to organize to repudiate ‘his party leadership. The 1940 ‘Republican Presidential candidate believes that the G. O. P. cannot become an effective opposition to the Administration’s management of the defense program nor to its handling of other domestic problems until the question of isolationism is disposed of.

Bring Issues Into Open

The outline of Mr. Willkie’s views unquestionably was authoritative. He makes a definite and emphatic distinction between the Administration’s anti-Hitler foreign policy and domestic . questions such as: management of defense production and other home front matters. Mr. Willkie has not discussed with anyone in Washington the movyement undertaken against him here nor his plans to support or to oppose certain’ Republican congressional candidates in next year’s general election campaign. But he was represented as feeling that the sooner the whole question of isolationism within the party is ‘brought into the open and fought out, the better -for the country. Published reports that Republicans who support Administration foreign policies could expect his aid next year and that he would op-

|| pose isolationist congressional can\|didates apparently aroused the ‘movement to read. him out of the

party. Aggressive Drive Seen

If that issue comes to a showdown, it is known here that Mr. Willkie’s position will be that he ‘is not thinking of party success next year either in terms of a Republican or a Democratic victory but, as

lone of his associates put it—*“he

wants the country to win the 1942 election.” » Mr, Willkie is expected to campaign for a foreign policy even more aggressive than that undertaken by the Roosevelt Administration. He contends that only by “establishing the Republican Party as the ‘advocate of aggression .against Hitler can the G. O. P. obtain sufficient public standing to force adoption of adequate measures to preserve freetdom and to assure efficient, economic and sound administration of national defense and other domestic business. :

SERVICES. HELD FOR OTTO C. STRAWDER

Services will be at 10 a. m. tomorrow morning at the Ray Street Church of the Nazarene for Otto C. Strawder who died Monday at his home, 654 Coffey St. He was 58. Mr. Strawder was an employee of the Chevrolet Commercial Body division of General Motors Corp. Born near Martinsville, he lived

|{most of his life in Indianapolis.

Tiny caps ‘blos-

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5:42

A

DOWNSTAIRS

He was a member of the board of trustees of the Ray Street Church of the Nazarene. ‘Mr. Strawder had been paralyzed since Nov. 11, 1939, when he was injured in an aulomobile accident at Oliver Ave. anc Division St. Surviving are the wife, Mrs. Ora B. Strawder, and three brothers, James, William and Frank Strawder.

{AUTO INJURIES FATAL

TO JOSEPH TOPH, 80

Joseph Toph, R. R. 14. died yesterday at City. Hospital from injuries received in a traffic accident

jilast Priday.” He was 80 and was

struck by an automobile at 63d St. and College Ave. Mr. Toph, had been a salesman for L. 8. Ayres & Co. 30 years, retiring seven years ago. He was a native of Mount Hope, O;, and had lived in this city for the last 60 years. . He was a member of .the Knights of Pythias and the Chriss tian Church. Survivors are the wife, Mrs. Oliah Perkins Toph, and two sisters, Mrs. Katie Benson and Mrs. Deborah Schnitzger, both of Cincinnati, O. Services will be at 1:30 ‘'p. m. tomorrow at Flanner & Buchanan Mortuary, Cremation will follow.

MOTHERS’ CLUB TO MEET .

The ‘DeMolay Mothers’ Club will meet at 2 p. m. Friday at the

Shapies house, 1017 Broadway.

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FOR SHOWDOWN|

WASHINGTON, Nov. 3—Wen- fires

‘When firemen. cone. back from a false alarm run, they don't grin. To

‘Inot * jokes. 8

that the false alarm runs are the jor

‘Somehow, it’s always the false alarms or the “fires” that turn out to be smoking chimneys that take the toll in the Pire Department. Call it providence, fate, luck or anything else. It happens to work out: {that way. And that’s the reason the boys in le Bre Fire Department ‘dread “false

- At Fairfield and ‘College Ave. not long ago, a fire fruck crashed en

while answering and fighting 1

|route to a fire that “didn’t turn out.’

to: be anything.” [Last summer a firemdn died from injuries in a fire truck crash. That was a false alarm.’

This year in Indianapolis, nearly. 10 per cent of all alarms the firemen answer have been false. Someone’s idea of a joke costs the City plenty, too, in addition: to bringing death and injury to’ the firemen who have to go out at full blast on an alarm, false or not. . This year to date, there have been 317 false alarm runs which cost the taxpayers about $50 apiece. Firemen are convinced that nos false alarms are not the pranks of children. On Halloween night, only one false alarm was turned in. And where youngsters are in-

#4

them, false alarms are tragedies, |

They know in the Fire Depart- i ment without checking the records

“ljinx. Piremen are rarely injured

Assistant

volved, polic invariably find out

who did it. ‘But in Ls first four days of this month,’ there have been 13 false alarms. Nine of them were pulled over: the week-end and four came Monday night. : The: firemen who made those runs know that |} youngsters didn't turn them in. It was an older person .who is today the ‘object of a determined search by iy detectives.

» Chief 0. J. Petty . te Ave, the false alarm jinx Is worked overtime,

5 at this box at North St. and

“The false alarms Ménday night went this way: 5:33 p. m., St. Clair and West Sts.; 10:43 p. m., 10th st. and the Canal; 11:46 p. m., Pennsylvania and Merrill ‘Sts., ‘and 1:49 a. m., 22d St. ‘and -Avondale Place. To Fire ‘Chiet- Harry Fulmer and to detectives, it appeared as though someone was cruising ,around pulling alarms. To firemen, that was ‘the sathe as|; pulling the. jinx onthe Fire Departmen : It always hag worked that ‘way.

RCA WORKERS: 60 TO SCHOOL

Six- Months Ce Course of General Education Offered By Plant.

. A course of general education for employees has been opened by the R. C. A. Manufacturing Co. . The company has offered . six months of short instructional courses of general interest to be conducted in the Hotel Dearborn. Courses will be held each week of the month in classes of one to two

hours. F. H. Kirkpatrick, personal director of the R. C. A, said “we want to have everyone ‘who works t the R. C. A, to be a better type 0 rson because of having worked

“Ony of the several things we t t\ «do is to make the employees|better people,” he said. He said that it is not a program of employs ment training but one of general education. “Each employee is free to elect one or more courses and instructors will be obtained both from the company and from specialists in some particular field. : List November Courses

November a ‘Accounting Introduction) : Monday, 5 p. 'm., R. H., Webber of R.C. A, instructor. Basketball (for girls): Thursday, 7pm, J W. Huston of R. C: A, instructor. Clothing Selection and Style (tor girls): Tuesday, 4:30 p. m., Mrs. Elizabeth Patrick of 1. S. Ayres & Co., instructor. Ballroom Dancing: Thursday, 4:30 p. m., Williarn Holmes and Miss Mae Cowgill of the ‘Arthur Murray Studios, instructors. Etiquette (for girls): Tuesday, 7 p. m., Miss Caroline Varin of Orchard School, instructor, ‘Mathemati (trigonometry): Wednesday or Thursday, 8:30 p. m., William * B. Davis of R. C. A, instructor, ° Shop Theory (introduction): Wednesday or Thursday, 7 p. m., E. E. Alger of R. C. A, instructor.

AMERICA FIRST SPEAKER Dr. C. D. W. Hildebrand, professor of philosophy, DePauw University, will address the America First Committee of: Indianapolis’ tomorrow night. The meeting will be at 40 N. Pennsylvania St. and is the last before. the state convention of

The Sourses and instructors for|

Rules Beer Truck

sn’ tf Warehouse

A. [LOADED BEER TRUCK, | parked in a garage away from . the brewery, is not a warehouse and the practice is legal, Attorney General George, Beamer ‘Tuled today. His ruling was made connection with a case where the Indianapoli§ Brewing Co. was cited as having violated the liquor law by parking loaded delivery trucks in Evansville and . continuing sales the next day. The Attorney General pointed out, however, that the Alcoholic Beverages Commission, for. which the ruling was made; could estab-. lish its: own Teguiation against the practice. The Commission was to make a ruling. in the’ case today. :

ALBERT HAUGH SERVICES HELD

City Employee Dies at 72; Resident Here . 65 Years.

Services were held at 10° a. m. this morning for Albert Haugh, City employee, at Flanner & Buchanan Mortuary. Burial was’ in Crown Hill. He died Sunday at his home after four months illness. Mr. Haugh, who was 72, was em-

played at the City sanitation plant

for the last seven years and was a resident of Indianapolis 65 years. He was active in politics and was a Democratic precinct committeeman for 20 years. Sruvivors are the wife, Mrs. Sarah Haugh; a son, Prank Haugh, Columbus, O:.; a daughter, Mrs. Edna Eads, Hammond, and a ‘granddaughter, Miss Barbara Lou. ‘Haugh, Columb us. :

ALMOND E. WILSON, JILL 2 WEEKS, DIES

A resident of Marion County many years, Westfield, died yesterday af ‘St. Vincent's Hospital after two weeks’ illness. He was 79. “Mr. Wilson. was a. retired employee of: the Burford Printing - Co. ; Surviving ‘are a son, Urbon Wilson, Indianapolis; a daughter, Mrs. Russell Stahl, Westfield, and a sis-

Indiana committees here Sunday. |

ber, Mrs, Cora Williams, Russell, Ky.

In the Service—

CAMP GRANT, I, Nov. 5— Twenty-two selectees from Indianapolis have been assigned to Camp Grant for basic’ ‘training “in the Medical Corps, | according to Brig. Gen. John M. Willis, commander of

: |the camp.

They are: Herbert E. Baumeister,

[431 Blue Ridge Road; Walter Bur-

row. Jr., 8811 B. 10th’ St.: Leroy J.

I Callahan, 701 Bacon St.; George H.

Carney, 52¢ Mills-8¢t.; Robert K.

| Chowning, 2815 N. ‘Sherman Drive;

Robert N.- Cron, 4930 Brookville

1Rd.; Charles R. * Cunningham, 3034

Central Ave. : ‘Wilbur: H. Downs Jr.,

Others are: Frederick Koch, 1411

lotz, 247 N, Randolph St.; Oya O McGowan, 610 S. ‘Meridian Joseph M. Palmer, 5122 Mia Dr.: John W. Peek, 1500° N. ‘Win-

Rd;

[Capitol Ave. and Forrest 5

it 12. Waleots St.

22 Indiana Draftees Seni To Camp Grant for Training};

fleld ‘Ave; Raymond L. Reed, 4231{ .7: Ai ‘Rosenfield, oT 4402 “Washington Blvd; ‘Eldinilge | gua A: Runner, 224 Bicking St.; Raymond]

16 Get Discharges

Sixteen Indianapolis soldiers: have been released from service at Camp

clause of the amended Selective

5780 Central Ave.: Gilbert D. Kern, Lloyd © 1002 Elbert St., and Harold George | = | Kirch, 1319 Leonard St. dstr.

S. New Jersey St.; Arthur O. Lang-|""

HONOR SIX FOR |

‘Almond. E. Wilson,|

Shelby, ' Miss.,, under the 28-year|

AVIATION. WORK

Chicago & & Southern Air ‘Lines to" Present: Plagues To Local Men.

Six Indianapolis: a. will receive plaques tomorrow. in. recognition ‘of their contribution to aviation. - The plaques will be presented by the ‘Chicago a Southern Airlines ‘and are the first of several to be presénted throughout the country. Men: who will receive the ‘citations

i Men seekiig Jobs o on pr return | trom. military service will find re-| fo employment committeemen at their} si; {leeal: hoard ready to assist them: "| ‘The appointment by. - Governor: | Henry F.: Schticker. of 140 of these - | e)mmitteemen throughout the State | was. announced today by Lieut.-Col. : Fiobinson Hitchcocks ‘State Selec-| | tive ‘Service : Director. | There will

EDWARDS; wards, died Josterday

fi

el ee }

he one committeeman foreach of|l .

the 152 local boards in the state.

| Twelve are yet to be named. . : Governor Schricker made the ap-|| yointments from recommendations | jet the:

Indiena ‘Employment Secur“lity Division, the State Labor Division, Selective Service Headquarters | snd Local Boards.. -

Local: ‘Men Appointed:

Committeemen named for Marion J

County boards: are the ~following Indianapolis men:

Herschel W.. Rupprecht, Board |

No. 2; Irwin P. ‘Eagan; Board ‘No, 4; John 'W. Smith, Board No. 5; J. W, Coftmen, Board So. 7; R. G. Kremer, Board No. 8; Seth H. New|land, Board No. 10; Ear] Beck, Board No. 171; .C. 8S. Lukenbill, 30oard No. 12; Myeon R. Green, Board No. 14; IL. O .. Baker, Board. No. 15. Five members for Marion County

are yet to be ‘appointed.

‘Three-Fold Objectives

" Objectives of the committeemen are: 1. To return men. to the same or

Joetter positions ‘with their former}

employers. 2. To secure jobs for those not previously employed. 3. To find new. positions for those Bos 3 willing to return to their former 0! v Lieut. Col. Hitchoook said that about 500 notices had been received from. men about to-be released from service. 'An attempt will be made to place men through the regular employment facilities of the Indiana Employment Security Division. Committeemen and the ageney will ‘also attempt to place skilled men where they will be of greatest use to the defense program, Hi

are: Mayor Reginald Sullivan, Henry BE. Ostrom, chairman’ of : aviation | committee, Indianapolis ‘Chamber of Commerce; William Book, executive “vice president, - Chamber of | Commerce; Myron R. Green, secretary; Chamber . of Commerce; Col. Roscoe Turner and Nish Dienhart, Municipal Airport . superintendent. Along with. the plaques, the :men will = be commissioned = “Flying Colonels” in the Dixie Air Fleet of the Chicago and. Southern Airline; Lynn H. Stambaugh, national commander, Amgen n,. Now attending ' the Legion convention, here, will also - Tecelve 8 citation.

GEORGE Ww. GIBBS ‘RITES “TOMORROW

Services will be.at 8 p.m. tonight at Jordan Funeral Home. for George W. Gibbs, 2018 RR Olney | St. Burial will be at. Bainb tomorrow. He was 15 an died G4 a haart atiack at his home Monday. . A resident of thid city the lass 25 years, Mr. Gibbs was: born: in Buin bridge, Putnam County. ‘He Wes a

MERLE L. DUNCAN, TAXI DRIVER, DIES

‘Duncan, taxicab driver, will be at 10 a. m. tomorrow &t Conkle Funeral Home. Burial will be in New Crown Cemetery. He was 38 and died Monday after a brief: illness. A resident of Indianapolis 28 years, Mr. Duncan was a native of Jackson County. He was employed by the Red Cab Company, and lived at 1360 W. 26th St. - Surviving are the wife, Mrs. Mary BE. Duncan; his mother, ‘Mrs. Maude E. Duncan; ‘six brothersy Rollie, Raymond, Walter and Hershel Duncan, all of Indianapolis; nethh Duncan, Bloomington; and Ira Duncan, Honolulu, Hawaii,

THREE PET DOGS POISONED

in / neighborhood of the: 1900 b f Montcalm St. was reported

onged: to Mrs. Mildred Young, 1919 Montcalm St., John Perry, 1816 Milburn’ St.; and Robert C. Little, 1862 burn St. oy

saw operator for the Hoosier Veneer (Mil

Co. more than ‘15 years, retiring in

1932. Survivors are. the wife, Mrs. Cora

0: Gibbs: two sons, Walter £ 0. Gibbs, | -

Bainbridge, and Robert F. Gibbs, Indianapolis; two: ‘daughters, ‘Mrs. Totten, Indianapolis; seven grandchildren, and; 0: ~great-grand-children. =

EDGAR STARR. DEAD; RITES TOMORROW

Services for ‘Edgar Starr, 3720 Salem ‘St, will be at 10 a. ‘m. tomorrow at Hisey 4 Titus Mortuary, |} ‘with ‘burial "in" Hill. Mr.

Starr, who. was , died Monday at|

his home. A resident of ‘Indianapolis the last 27 years, Mr. Starr ‘was born at Hastings, 'Neb.. Since . coring here he was employed. by the La-

{mont Corlis Co. gE was a merdbet

of the Oriental Masonic - Lodge and the Methddist Church. : Survivors are his wife, Mrs. ‘Bertha Starr; a son, Edgar Starr Jr.; four

daughters, Misses Barbara Ann, and

Roberta Starr, Mrs. Evelyn Ross and

apolis, and. sisters Harger, ‘Niles, ich,” is

WOMEN. Get 2-Way Relief!

renmtt

Periodical headaches, nervousness, cramp-like pain, - when “due

Mrs, Lula

Mor only to functional causes,’ are revt, lieved for so many women who start bert F.lon CARDUI three days ahead of [Sh sme ante: $+ as desig,

Bat: CAEDUL lias Atigthee pos

Mildred McVey and: Mrs, Evelyn|

Mrs, Bdith MeTeoH, all.of Tngians |;

Eyes Examined : ' GLASSES FITTED Dr. Charles 0. Jeffrey

Funeral services for Merle L.

The poisoning of three pet dogs |

Jesterday to: police. The dogs be--

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