Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 8 July 1942 — Page 7

" dent of this city, died Monday at

WORKER DEAD

Honey C. Williams Lived Here 44 Years: Rites Scheduled Friday.

‘A retired raffroader and a resident of this city for 44 years, Henry| Clayton Williams died yesterday at] his home, 912 Harlan st., after a + brief illness. He was 68. Lo Coming to Indianapolis ‘in 1898 from his birthplace in Athens county, Ohio, he was employed by the - Big Four railroad as a hostler until © his retirement two years ago. : Services will be conducted at 2 P- m. Friday at the Bert 8, Gadd . funeral home, with’ burial in Crown Hill Mr. Williams is survived by his wife, Ella; two sons, Gilbert and . Harry, both of this eity; four broth- . ers, James of Toledo, O. Elsworth of London, O., and Archie and Albert, both of Columbus, O.; two sisters, Mrs. Harriett Anderson and Miss Lillie Williams, both of Indi- . anapolis, and two grandchildren.

FORMER RESIDENT

This heater went “boom” in the basement of the Plaza hotel today, bulging a wall and blowing out | a 12-foot-square plate glass window in the coffee ‘shop. peppered the automobile of Julius Kominsky of Chicago which was parked on Capitol ave. Some of the glass particles penetrated the metal body of the car,

No one was injured buf the splintered glass The damage was not estimated,

DIES IN SAN DIEGO

Mrs. Nellie E. Rose, a former resi-

STEELWORKERS

home in San Diego, Cal. She

Sue senso 0.1 MAY GET BONDS

& daughter, Mrs. Harold Bowering, and two grandchildren, all of San

Diego. |WLB Panel . Justified, Roosevelt | NO PRIORITY ;

Finds Raise

Lucky Goes to As Army

By FREMONT POWER Times Staff Writer

was brief and solemn, Lucky's funeral. Shortly after noon yesterday they

Hero's Grave Joins in Tribute

soldiers fired a three-volley salute. And so they laid Earl M. (Lucky)

NOBLESVILLE, Ind. July 8—It| Teter to rest.

. In October .-he would have been 42, and probably an officer in the motor division of the quartermaster corps. He had applied for a com-

Practiced Here More

{and who owned one of the

40 Years; on Staff |» 3 Hospitals.

Dr. George S. Row, an ey" | cialist here for more than 40

first X-ray machines, died tc his home, 5214. Grandview

{He was 75.

il

‘He had been a clinical pre: 2ssor of ophthalmolgy at the : Medical college and a staff ni of City, Methodist and St. Vii int’s

| hospitals.

Born in Osgood, Ind, Dr| Row graduated from the Miami ¢illege

versity of Cincinnati, in 189¢ He

- |was married to Mary Msi: =

ophthamology here.

Practiced With Son ‘He was a member of the ndi-

|cletigs: fhe American Medic: sociation, and fhe Indianapo!

brother, Perry C. Row of a daughter, Mrs. W. Sinclair] bridge of Toledo, O.; a son 11. Hamilton Row, with whom

Mansur building, and four ¢ andchildren. { Funeral services will be p. m. Friday in the Fla Buchanan mortuary. Crem ation will follow. ls |

of medicine, now part of the Uni-|#8

{No Change in Neutrality

| | —Premier Refik Saydam, 61, phy-

| hotel.)

® | ministry pending appointment of a i l]new premier by President Ismet i | Inonu.

|8aracoglu would succeed to the

4 | coglu, Saydam' was a veteran in a

TURK PREMIER |. SAYDAM DEAD

“peace - feelers” among the nations under the pretense that

ras oop Suid, sim Wi

Policy - Expected io

To Result.

ANKARA, Turkey, July 8 (U. P).

sician-politician who had steered Turkey on its difficult course as a neutral among warring states since 1939, died at midnight of heart disease while on vacation at Istanbul. (The German official news agency, in a Berlin broadcast heard in London, said that Saydam died in a

thyroid deficiency and you have nothing She matter with Yous Just eA

Interior Minister Fikri Tuzer assumed Saydam’s duties in the prime

Saracoglu Favored

exercises when your and fat is. due

It was believed in political quarters that Foreign Minister Sukru

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prime ministry and that Saydam’s death would result in no change in the country’s foreign policy. Saydam received a one month leave last November because of illness, and political quarters believed then that he would resign in Saracoglu’s favor. There had been earlier rumors that because of ill health he would give up his post.

Neutrality and Friendship Like President Inonu and Sara-

Women

political team which had worked in close harmony for years. Since the war started, they had sought above all to keep Turkey neutral, while maintaining friendship with Great Britain and the allies. Laurence A. Steinhardt, the new American ambassador, had main-

FST

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RAT

AE

BE — TE ————tr SS os " TY —— i aba

—_—

Sure to Reach | Camp on 3d [ry KEY WEST, Fla, July § (U. P.).—Lawrence Mora has bec: assured by his draft board thi: he would arrive at Camp Bla ing, Fla. where he has been orf :zred

for induction. This will be his third depa: ure.

Recently arrived. from Dutch ALWAYS A SQUARE DEAL Harbor are these three army men who can still smile despite having their front teeth knocked out by Jap bombings. Top to bottom: Corp. Bruce Richardson; Corp. Louis Prentice and Pvt. Robert Miliam, There was no explanation of the phenomenon by which the trio lost the same uppers.

brought the body to the First Meéthodist church here. Hundreds of his pals and those who had heard of him filed past the casket to pay their last respects. Then at 3 o'clock the: services began. The church was packed and some stood in the two foyers and some even out on the sidewalk, Two rows of seats were taken by the Hell Drivers who worked with

mission. and it had been looked upon with favor. As it was, though, Lucky died for the army. The show at the Fair Grounds was for the benefit of the army emergency relief, which takes care of soldiers’ dependents. It was to be Lucky’s last show until the war was Over.

Never Watched Leap Although Lucky's wife wasn’t at

Fears Inflation. On GenuineQLAY TILE |

"WASHINGTON, July 8 (U. P.).— Some members of the war labor board today indicated that if the board orders a wage increase for “little steel” workers at least part of it may be payable in war bonds. Board officials emphasized that no decision has been reached either on the wage or the union shop demands of the United Steel Workers (C. I. 0.) in the four little steel

tained close contact with them hts since his arrival here. ale iid BITE Saydam entered politics after he | [i ESI acted as medical attendant to the late Kemal Ataturk, father of the Turkish republic, in 1919.

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of living caused considerable disgussion anfong the board members. Mr. Roosevelt said he certainly was against any further increase in living cost, but would not say whether he favored or opposed a steel {wage increase.

Cite Shipbuilding Pact

One board member said a wage increase payable in bonds would have no effect on living costs since it would not add immediately to the purchasing power of the workers. The bonds could be converted to cash after 60 days, but he said he believed most workers would hold them except in cases of urgent need. WLB Chairman William H. Davis pointed to’ the shipbuilding stabilization agreement as an ex-

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ON CONTACT The board, in concluding preALL 5 FUNGI OF | iminary studies yesterday of a fact finding panel's report on the “little steel” workers demand for a $1 a day wage increase, discussed the

sters and Ry three months ago at Chicago, it

*Iprovided for an increase of eight fi dgoimely we, Motes beck cents an hour, payable in war bonds.

‘Most Workers Convert

The board's report showed that in yards where state laws require

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workers have agreed to convert the extra 8 cents an hour into war bonds. The steel workers now earn an average of approximately $1 an hour, and had an average annual income of $1950 last year. The fact finding panel said that was sufficient fo maintain the workers. in health and reasonable comfort. It found, however, that an increase would be justified on a basis of giving the workers an equitable share “of the national pie.

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President Roosevelt’s statement at his press conference late yesterday that a steel wage increase would be a factor in increasing the cost

OTTAWA, July 8 (U. P.).—Finsl approval of a measure that will enable Canada to draft men for overs seas fighting was assured today. The house of commons voted 158 .to 4 54 last night in favor of the second reading of an amendment to the national resources mobilization act, which removes the prohibition

Lucky Teter, They were pallbearers. Sitting with them was his bereaved wife, Edna, who had flown in that morning from Miami, Fla. Cliff Bergere, the stunt driver, was there, too. . In front were Lucky’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. Arza W. Teter of Noblesville, and his sister, Ruth. Lucky's mother was prostrate with grief and had to be assisted into the church. “I never feared any danger,” his mother had said the year before. “I always felt he could do anything.”

But Lucky's luck ran out Sunday night at the fair grounds and he was killed in the “rocket car ieap” during the army emergency relief “cavalcade of thrills.” Also in the crowd was Shipwreck Kelly, the flagpole sitter; Benny Fox, the little guy who dances on top of a tall pole; Police Chief Morrissey of Indianapolis; Col. Walter S. Drysdale of Ft. Harrison and Col. Frederick A. Lynch of the army air corps depot at the fair grounds.

Pastor's Words Brief

One section of the church was occupied by the 720th and 798th military police battalions, who held their rifles in white-gloved hands. The Rev. E. J. Wickersham’s words were brief. The theme was that no man is ever alone—the Spirit is always with him. Then began the slow procession to Crownland cemetery, led by the Pt. Harrison band. The drums were

payments of wages in cash, most draped in the traditional black.

At the grave, the Rev. Mr. Wickersham said a short prayer, the

the show Sunday night (one of the few she’d missed), she probably wouldn’t have seen the crash that killed him had she been there. Mrs. Teter never tried to stop her husband from stunting in speeding autos, for she felt that was what he wanted to do and that was all right. But she never looked at his “rocket car leap” over the semi-trailer truck. When he roared toward the ramp that would hurl him over the truck, she would turn her head. By the sound of the racing motor and the roar of the crowds, she could tell if everything was going to be all right. How Lucky Started She probably would have known that Lucky didn’t have the speed to make the jump Sunday night. Always making the stunt harder, he had stretched the ramps 150 feet apart, five feet more than ever before. : While waiting for the body to arrive at the grave yesterday, one of Lucky's friends explained . how he first started stunting. “He was driving a milk truck in the country,” the friend said. “Why he could take a 10-gallon can of milk in each hand and throw ’em right up on the truck. Said it kept him in condition.

Vowed He'd Conquer

“He was a prize-fighter then, you know,” the friend went on. “Well, one day the truck turned over in the ditch. “And, boy, Lucky was mad. “He climbed out and said, goin’ to conquer them things.’ “Yessir, that’s what he said, goin’ to conquer them things’.”

Tm

‘I'm

BELIEVE MEXICAN PLANES SANK SUB

MEXICO CITY, July 8 (U. P).— Maj. Luis Noriega Medrano led a squadron of Mexican warplanes which attacked and possibly sank an axis submarine 25 miles north of the oil port of Tampico Sunday afternoon, it was revealed today. North American bombers dropped two bombs “very close” to the sub-

submarine was

WASHINGTON SERVICE BUREAT, Dept. 210, 1013 THIRTEENTH ST, WASHINGTON, D. C.

. '§ enclose - fifteen pent tor wy oopy ot “GENEALOGY NAME ee

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bombers, built in the United States,

merged axis raider in Mexico's first combat participation of the war. Gen. Anacleto Guerrero, military zone commander, said he had not determined definitely whether the

Clara R. Hassler ‘Dead Here at 57

MRS. CLARA R. HASSLER of 121 Buckingham drive, long time resident, died today. Her husband is a member of the Smith, Hassler Co. sporting goods dealers. She was 57 and had been in in health for two years. She was a member of the Capitol Avenue Methodist church. 5 Surviving are. her husband, Floyd; a son, Donald; a daughter, Mrs. Frances Bechert, and two sisters, Mrs. Elizabeth Rehke and Mrs, Carrie Newhouse, all of Indianapolis.

‘DANVILLE BOY DROWNS . DANVILLE, Ind, July 8 (U, P)).

The North American medium|—Harry Ketter, 9, son of Mr. and

Mrs. Raymond Ketter, drowned yes-

The first time he started ow: he: got off the bus at Marathon, la., and returned home with &| had case of “cold feet.” He appeared before his tiraft board the following morning requesting another chance. | The “ board furnished his bus fare znd he started out again, and this time he got as far as Sugar | .oaf Key. His final request was for a;

of-

ficer who would be sent aloi; to mp. yet.

SUPPLY PLANES a

insure his arrival at the ¢ That is exactly what he his

2) =

‘vice

vital war equipment and per nnel to stiategic points in the A

Operating a fleet of transpor aircraft, American army pilots and Australian civil fliers have ci ried

front-line outposts, frequently aSSing over enemy territory. From the front, they ret: ined wounded men to base hospital: and bring back airplane engines and other equipment in need of 7 nair. One of the service's outste.: ding feats was a series of flights ic. the Philippines with quinine and | ‘her medical supplies during the sis a of Bataan. ;

JAP CLAIM: ALLIED BURMA DEAD 24

TOKYO, July 8 {Japanese Broad cast Recorded by U. P. at San I ‘ancisco) —British

and armored cars, 825¢ freigh' - 11,248 vifiés and 15,000 shells Japanese claimed, i

HOLD RITES To FOR ELLA SCHW

VANNUYS LAUDS HOOSIER FERVOR

Petty - Politics Forgotten, Winning War Chief Aim, Senator Found.

Times Smecial . WASHINGTON, July 8.—Senator Frederick - VanNuys (D. Ind.) returned from 10 days in Indianapolis with a glowing report regarding the wartime attitude of the poeple in Indiana. “I was never more proud of the Hoosiers in my life,” the senior senator said. “For once in the history of my native state politics of the petty,

personal and partisan type seems:

completely adjourned. “My hotel room was filled with visitors day and night and there ‘always was far more talk about winning the war than winning the November election.

Business, Labor Busy

“Businessmen and laboring men all are busy and Indiana industry is doing a bang-up job of production. They are ready to pay high taxes, cut down on personal expenses or do anything else that is needed. “There is none of the hip-hip-hooray of the last world war, but the people are quietly doing the job efficiently and well. I was told by a naval officer that Indiana is tops in enlistments now, where formerly

-{we ranked preity low. The war

bond business is booming there and

0 {factories are in high gear. “Everyone is backing President|

Roosevelt and the winning of the war. I DUeRSS 10 Denics or appesse-

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joined Mexico's gulf coast air patrol|terday in Little White creek. Betwo weeks after an enemy sub-|sides the parents, two brothers surIating sank two Mexican tankers! vive,

STATE

BOONVILLE—George vivors: Wife, : Hudson; Sons, Earl EV.

vi . ters, Ms.

James Coan, Survivors:

Wife Nis Tae Ly

Biehl, Mrs. Ms: & Zotts While

EE Crazies, ‘dace Walls, 84

Clarence Bins: laren

eR See UL: i

pits Nella «Mustard, 88 38 4 Survivor:

Lucy; daughter Mary Goodman" brother, Luther; "sister, | husband,

DEAT HS

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siste: e Rothermel; brothers, Ted, Joseph, Chas es Sullivan.

Martha Holland,

| ar A SHINGTON-_M1s, Ba

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. Mrs. Alce Holland; sons,

LOGANSPORT, Ind, July 3 (OU. P.).—A runaway team of horse: ost the life of Alvah Imel, 64, ¥ ton county farmer, as he was thi wn info a ditch wile raking hay 3

FOUNDED 1897 ol