Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 13 November 1941 — Page 17

have

Lose Half of Men, - London Hears.

MH, STONEMAN

is Times || 2 Jndianapolis 1 Ine. meg

yéen “very considath Panzer Divise ion ‘after two ; of “exceptionally heavy ing = was ‘ entirely withdrawn early (in September and . has: just reapp ‘in ‘the fighting,

erable.” . The

Our Lady of Lourdes, Little Flower

Three Catholic high school clubs. will hold a “Turkey. Si Nov. 24 at the Riviera Club and (left to right) Mary Cullen, Carl Fitz gerald and Rachel Matthews are busy with plans. The schools are

” dance

and St. Philip Neri.

Infantry Di ns Suffer There is also what is’ described ‘as “very good evidence” of heavy): casualties in more than "70" infantry: divisions, including motorized, light and mounted eral ‘cases casual

FBI SEIZES RECORDS OF FUNDS SENT JAPS

LOS ANGELES, Nov, 13 (U. P.).

es were reported|tion has: seized from Japanese orto be as high as 50 per cent of or-|ganizations here a “large quantity”

shane 16 id 3 TR ‘of records containing" receipts for Sonfired that Infantr, divisions haye| funds sent to the Japanese Army

and navy, it’ was learned today.

The records were taken f th While no definite totals are ®t ven head fli po the aie ni and are difficult i q

case of an Army which has been|Chamber of Commerce and the advancing, 19 Central Japanese Association. .' would have a “Several present and past officers about 6270 tanks and 18 divisions—]0f the association were ‘questioned a number which is said to have|by FBI agents. They admitted that confirmed that infantry divisions|“gratuities” had been sent to the lost two-thirds of their |Japanese military forces. but said strength. that they had stopped when. Presi- ; , Not Included: dent Roosevelt proclaimed an un

limited national emergency. . The total manpower of 16 panzer # Sivisions would be about 200,000

(uoniallyfo

Japanese |-

divisions. In sev-|—The Federal Bureau of Investiga- LE NTERS : PRISON

Judge Overrules Arbogast Plea for Mistrial in Relief Fraud.

VINCENNES, Ind, Nov. 13 (U. P.).—Knox County * Coroner ‘ Dr. Paul B. Arbogast today began serving a 2-to-14-year term in the InJdiana State Prison following his conviction by a Knox Circuit Jury Nov. 1 on charges of - filing false medical claims : against the Vin-

[cennes Township poor relief fund.

‘Special Judge +A. Dale Eby of Princeton sentenced the 35-year-old

Be te = DEBATE SECOND

number: of which are said to have lost appreciably—would - contain about 1,050,000 men. Thus, units]

physician yesterday, overruling a defense counsel motion for an arrested judgment and mistrial, and

Knudsen Wants Strip: Mill Revamped fo We

Times Special

| | I | |

fice ‘ of - Production ion Management, ity

“| was announced toda; | Pn

Last month the Plant Corp, ad-

| vanced $34,000,000 for additions tof]

Inland at Indiana Harbor to: pro- | ‘duce “a 900,000-ton increase in: pig | iron: capacity. posed plan can be “largely through a: ‘more advantageous use of existing facilities,’ 3 Ye rector Knudsen said.

. Revamp Present. Strip Mill

°W. A, Hauck, OPM steel ‘con= sultant, explained that it would be done by revamping the

present mill so that additional ‘steel plate

and other products vital to defense Produe on. can be turned out; udsen report sets forth a “the proposed installation will provide in the quickest possible time an estimated increase of 42,000 tons of finished steel products monthly, all of which are in. urgent demand. Of special advantage is the fact the proposal not only eliminates the necessity of providing scrap for the conversion of the increased pig iron capacity, but will provide additional home scrap for -use in existing open “hearth furnaces, it was explained. Reserves Falling : Chairman E. L.. Ryerson of Inland was quoted as saying: “The Company’s reserves of steel scrap are being steadily diminished and this may result in curtailment| of operations unless the available supply of scrap improves.” Demand for the type of products made at the Inland plant is larger, than. present capacity and is con-

| WASHINGTON, Nov. 13—A plan] i for producing an additional 60,0008 ; tons of ingots monthly through use|ll : lof «the duplex. process’ at the In- |i | ! land :Steel - Co's. Indiana. Harbor | {plant has been presented to the De- ‘| fense Plant: Corp. by Director GenJéral Wililam S. Knudsen ‘of ‘the. Of-| F

‘But the newly pro- | FE carried out}

slim,

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88

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§

POWDER PLANT

which are definitely. known to have

~. suffered more or less heavily had a total of about 1,250,000. men: Casualties from illness are not included in these figures.

New Fall Styles For Men . . » $4.50 10 $7.50 For Women s oo « S42NISS

S834 N. Pennsylvania St, + (Opp. Loew’s Theater)

EYES EXAMINED, GLASSES FITTED

Tp 7 ‘David ‘Tovel (Reg. Optometrist) T

War Department Studies

. Plans for One Near Crawfordsville.

Plans for construction of a large fordsville, Ind., are under consideration by the War Department.

approved, officials said. Neither the War Department nor

rejecting a later plea that the sen- stantly. increasing, the report con-

tence be suspended.. Arbogast lett for Michigan City immediately following Judge Eby’s pronouncement. Sherman C. Davenport, - Arbogast’s attorney, said

that no motion for a new trial or

an appeal to the State Supreme

WASHINGTON, Nov. 13 (U. P) —|Court would be made.

Arbogast was indicted last December, together with I. Grant

smokeless powder plant near Craw-|Beesley, former Vincennes Town-

ship trustee. The physician was elected county coroner following the indictment, and was .to have held

Details such as the exact site, 0D-|ofrice until Dec. 31, 1942. Three of eration and size have not yet been|the four indictments against Beesley were quashed.

The Knox County commissioners, y a vote of 2 to 1, today named

TaVELS

4 ESL MARK (FT SL

§aving

Earn Interest. November

(Eom 3%. Interest

110 EAST WASHINGTON

s SMARTLY

s ‘Received

Before S November 16 From

A 1as ‘and’ place it - Aa : ding e can’t promise for later. .

3 [IEEE FI of Pennsylvania

President Roosevelt has given for- ) mal approval to the project. Cost Dr. J. L. Blaise to fil Arbogast’s of similar powder plants in the defense program have ranged from $30,000,000 to more than $50,000,000.

unexpired term. Dr. Blaize served two terms as circuit court clerk and is a former Knox County Democratic chairman.

the Vincennes automobile license branch.

BOMBER FOR R. A. F.MISSING IN ARIZONA |

PHOENIX; Ariz., Nov. 13 (U. P.). —A twin-motored medium bomber destined for the Royal Canadian Air Force, and its pilot, Lieut. Laurence Barrett Jr., were missing somewhere southeast of Phoenix today. It was one of four ships being ferried from Long Beach, Cal, to Canada which ran into a heavy

storm over southern Arizona. Two of the ships made Phoenix

safely but a third crashed and ‘its|said. pilot, Lieut.’ Ivan J. May, Topeka,|

Kas., of the Army ferry command, was killed. May crashed into a hill near Mohawk, 60 miies east of Yu«ima, after trying unsuccessfully fo land on a busy highway.

His last political office was chief of |

tinues. Current schedules are made up almost entirely of defense or= ders and the total backlog of orders is now equivalent to six months’ capacity productibn; The plant produces steel plates, structural shapes, bars, tube rounds and shell forgings, blooms and billets. .The duplex process mentioned in the report is one. where hot metal is placed in a Bessemer, blown and then sent to an open hearth while it still is molten. Many hours of melting time are saved®' by the process, thus increasing production. .

CONVICTION OF TWO UPHELD BY GREEN

WASHINGTON, Nov. 13 (U. P.). —President. William Green of the] American Federation of Labor today said exploitation of working nien and women in the organized labor mevement is a crime that “cannot be excused or condoned.”

His statement was 'made in connection with the conviction in New York last week of George E. Browne and William Bioff, motion picture industry labor czars, for TECKRIestie extortion and conspir-

A Exploitation by those who have been selected to Teresent working men and women in the organized labor movement is a crime of the greatest magnitude,” Mr. Green

“The conviction and penalties imposed upon. George E. Browne and william Bioff ought to serve as a warning to those who seek to use the labor movement for exploitation

purposes.”

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