Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 28 July 1942 — Page 2

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2 highway and in locked garages, ‘was unfolded today by local author-

. Jail under high bond following their

gers at Camp Atterbury, pawn shops

he had sawed his way out of the

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GANG SEIZED IN

Soi CARS

Three to Face Charges in "Henry County, 4th Here; Recover Tires.

ROST

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8 SATAI i) “i

~The story of four Indianapolis iif

youths, looted parked cars in the city, on

members of a gang that|

Three of the youths will be re- a X

turned to Henry county to face: The fourth one will |. 0 or J

charges there. ‘Pe tried here. All are held in the Marion county | ¢

arrest last Wednesday night by city |* ‘polic. Officers said they were rid4ng ‘ in an automobile which the |! . father of one member of the gang|« had reported stolen. Deputy sheriffs said the quartet signed statements admitting their part in the series of thefts which ranged over .11 Indiana counties.

Recover Some Tires

. Several of the tires and wheels he been discarded in the weeds along E. 38th st. and were recovered, deputies said. Others, they announced, were sold to war work-

on Indiana ave. and to several West side residents. The loot obtained by the gang amounted to more than $1000, depJAuties said, Investigating officers who worked on the case were Deputy Sheriffs “Carl Beck and A. J. Thatcher, De‘tective Sergt. Thomas Naumsek and .Btate Patrolman James Sheets.

ALGER'S ACCOMPLICE IN ESCAPE CONVICTED

, Probation officers today were in-

" westigating the case of Walter Ray-|"

.mond Cox, 34, of 204 Good ave., who was convicted by a Federal court jury yesterday for aiding Gene Alger, Hoosier gunman, in his escape “from Marion county jail last March. The jury deliberated less than 15 minutes and Judge Robert C. Balt- . Zell will pass sentence when he receives the probation officers’ report. Judge Baltzell ordered the records of the case left open, stating that he believed others were involved. . Alger was captured in a downtown restaurant a few hours after

county jail’s hospital room.

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Nazis Bite Ir Into Caucasus |

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‘Scandalous Conduct Charged to Friend of Hollywood Actor.

SAN FRANCISCO, July 28 (U.

charged with: “scandalous in the office of naval ofI .wrote three let-

conduc

ters to actor Tony Martin's draft 137%, | board before: Martin enlisted as a

naval ‘chief specialist. The letters were introduced at

J, D oh p14. |the trial after the reading of + | charges, which incliided ‘one that 75 Aroff accepted a Studebaker sedan

worth $950 from ° Martin after Martin joined the navy.: “ Aroff, former Los Angeles busi-

pic games weight lifter, was the first U. 8. naval officer to be tried

3 |by ‘court-martial in World War IIL

IRAN

Acme Telephoto.

This map shows where the Nazis are smashing deeper into the northern Caucasus and are threatening Stalingrad.

Allergic to Wool, Problem Solved

PT. BLISS, July 28.—Pvt. Raymond E. Forbes of Ft. Bliss, who can’t approach wool without breaking out in a rash, is destined for the tropics, where cotton uniforms are in style. A “patch” test at William Beau-

mont General hospital revealed that Forbes is suffering from a skin allergy. The minute he comes into contact with any wool, whether it be an olive drab uniform, blankets, or long-handled underwear, a rash, inflamed and painful, appears. So Forbes is heading for the Panama Canal Zone, where he can be comfortable and unembarrassed.

ABC WILL MAP TAVERN POLICY

Meets Thursday With Military Men to Solve Atter-

bury Problems.

“Members of the alcoholic beverage commission, military authorities, tavern owners and local authorities will meet in Columbus, Ind., Thursday to discuss the problem of policing taverns near Camp Atterbury, John F. Noonan, secretary of the commission, said today. More than 200 persons are expected to attend the meeting, the first of its type in Indiana. “We will hear the problems of the military authorities and then listen to constructive criticism,” Mr. Noonan said. “After we have heard all opinions, we can then decide on a plan of action.” Bernard E. Doyle, excise administrator of the ABC, will discuss the law governing sale of alcoholic beverages. Lowell H. Patterson,

| william Storen and Neil McCallum

of the ABC will also be present. Others who will attend are Harold Feightner, secretary of the Indiana brewers’ association; Richard Martin, secretary of the Indiana liquor wholesalers’ organization, and Pleas E. Greenlee, secretary of Indiana beer wholesalers’ association.

PROBE FATAL SHOOTING

NEW CASTLE, Ind. July 28 (U. P.).—Prosecutor Loring L. Niles said today he would ask a grand jury investigation of the shooting of Beecher Adams, 53, Elwood, despite a coroner's verdict of justifiable homicide. Town Marshal Robert Saxon, Middletown, was exonerated

of shooting Mr. Adams Saturday night as Mr. Adams sought to elude arrest.

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NAZIS DRIVE ON INTO GAUGASUS

‘Shooting Works’ in Push To Isolate Soviet Army

From Supplies. (Continued from Page One(

Volga and cut off the main flow of allied war supplies through Irak. That would be one of the hardest blows suffered by the united nations since the war opened in Russia. The Soviet army could fight on |= behind the Volga but its effect on the world-wide

it has played in the past. Land Air-Borne Tanks

allied plan for a second front,

Nazi retalitory blows.

fighting all along the 250-mile Don river front, Russian reports said that south of Roslov and Novo-

cherkassk, abandoned to the Germans yesterday, Marshal Semyon Timoshenko’s Soviet army fought desperately to stem Nazi mechanized forces threatening to widen their northern Caucasian front. Near a small village the Germans landed whipped tanks from big planes behind the Russians, but the tanks were said to have been

guns. Push Toward Oil Area

were headed toward the Maikop oil

reports said.

were pressing along a road leading to Stalingrad on a narrow front where, in the space of one day, a force of 8000 Germans were decimated.

casia in the Tsimilanskaya region,

bridgeheads.

falling back southward. . Rebuild Pontoon Bridges

gineers speedily replaced them. creasingly difficult to oppose Gersteppes south of the Don.

far as the Caucasus mountains, con-

movement of mechanized forces. Report Stalin at Front

Kerch strait of the Crimea. Such tactics = would seriously

Caucasia and Georgia.

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conflict generally |S would be far less than the key role

His trial began yesterday before a six-man court in the naval receiving ship at Yerba Buena Island, but officers planned to transfer it today because of noise from trains on the San Francisco-Oakland Bay bridge. ’ Urged Deferment

The first letter, dated Oct. 24, 1941, and addressed to Beverly Hills Draft Board No. 246, asked -that Martin be deferred for several months. Aroff wrote again in November, referred to a radio report that Martin either would be in the army “or commissioned in the navy by Dec. 7,” and asked clarification of the actor’s draft status. In the third letter, dated Dec. 22, Aroff said Martin had been rejected for a naval commission, but that the bureau of navigation in Washington had recommended that he be enlisted as a chief hoatswain’s mate. The letters were presented by Lieut. Comm. Albert Berry, selective servicer co-ordinator for Southern California. « Martin now is assigned to management of a service theater for navy men on Treasure Island in San Francisco Bay.

That factor has been behind the |S

which so far has been limited to |S mass air raids on Germany and|E

Describing continuing savage

knocked out by the fire of Soviet

From captured Rostov at the|S mouth of the Don the Germans|=

area, and near Tsimlyanskaya —|Z midway between Rostov and Stal-|E ingrad on the Don—they were try-|= ing to reach the important Tik-|S horetsk-Stalingrad railroad, Moscow |=

. Farther to the northeast at the = big bend of the Don the Germans |E pushed toward Kalach, only 40 miles |S from Stalingrad. Russian advices!|E said that “powerful enemy forces” |=

It appeared “that the Russians|S were achieving their best success in |= slowing down and halting the Ger- |Z man push across the Don into Cau- |=

where the Russians yesterday reported they had smashed German |=

In other piaces the Russians, un- : able to cope with the Germans’|S great numerical superiority, were|E

At many points along the Don - Russian artillery destroyed German |g pontoon bridges, but the Nazi en- E

Timoshenko’s forces found it in- |Z man. mechanized forces on the|E The battle area, from the Don as|E

sists of a fertile, treeless plain be-|& tween the Black ahd Caspian seas|E —a historic route of invasion of |= Caucasia and almost ideal for the|S

The Germans, holding the entire |E western shore of the sea of Azov,|E also are in a position to synchor-|& nize their push south from Rostov|E with. landings from Taganrog (40|E miles west of Rostov) across the|E narrow Azov neck and across the |=

menace the Kuban valley and the |S naval bases remaining in Russian |S hands on the Black sea coast of =

$0ES. ON TRIAL]

P.).—Lt. Ctndr. Maurice M. Aroff, |

iWeb lon trial - pefore a general court-| £5 lig: | martial

leader of the four sabotet { who

fon the Long Island shore, ee been represented before the | , commission by a separate couns:|| and is believed .to have turned Ev ern-

Dasch will be affected, a, § decides to. hear the habeas - “prpus plea, a petition probably we al be filed for Dasch. If the court decides that | he prisoners should be granted acces 53 to civil courts, it was learned, the will be bound over for trial in| th: federal district court. Such a de ision would bring to an end the miitary trial which has been in progress ; for

three weeks. nessman, amateur boxer and Olym- |

Recess Until Thursday i

First indication that an ur usual development was about to | brisk in the saboteurs’ case came lat: yesterday when Maj. Gen. Fran: MecCoy, president of the coramission, recessed until Thursday at ‘hich time he said final pleas were: “eX= pected” to begin. Shortly after the recess | WE | announced, Charles Elmore | Ciimley, chief clerk of the supreme :fourt, called reporters to his office: and issued the following announce: ment by Stone:

Subject to Law of War.

“The chief justice directs tii at it be announced that the |suireme court will convene a special term of court on. Wednesday, July 29, at noon, in order that petitios ; for writs of habeas corpus on bel i! certain persons now being |ti

the president, may be submit:zd to it. | 1 “The petitions will be pres:nted by counsel on July 29 and the prisoners will not be present gz the bar of the supreme court that day.” President Roosevelt's proclamation, issued July 2 under “aut: ority vested in me by the constitiiion,” asserted that access to Am: ican

AYRES YD

civil courts shall be denied to. citi-

To Hea! Saboferrs’ Pleas|

(Contin a from Page One(

zens ‘or subjects of enemy nations who enter this country in time of war “and are charged with committing or attempting or preparing to commit sabotage, espionage, hostile or warlike acts, or’ violations of the law of war.” The proclamation added’ that such | persons “shall be subject to the law of war and to the jurisdiction of military tribunals; and that such persons shall not be privileged to seek any remedy or maintain any proceeding, directly or indirectly, or |to have any such remedy or proceeding sought on their behalf, in the courts of the United States, or of. its states, territories and possessions, except under such regulations as ‘the attorney general, with the approval of the secretary of war, may from time to time prescribe.” Court attaches assumed that the saboteurs plea would attack the

«| validity: of the president’s denial to

the prisoners of access @o civil courts.

Only One Previous Case

Court attaches said the only other similar case was during the Civil War when a civilian, Lambdin (or Lamdin) Milligan, was accused of sedition, tried by a military commission and sentenced to hang. He, like the current saboteurs, petitioned the supreme court for a writ of habeas corpus. The court ruled that it had au-

‘thority to hear Milligan’s ‘petition

and then, after weeks of deliberation, handed down a divided decision in favor of the defendant. The court ordered Milligan discharged from the custody of the military authorities. The current special session developed another angle probably without precedent in American history. Ome of the justiczs, Frank Murphy, is a lieutenant colonel in the army who has not resigned from the bench, Reached by telephone at Dillworth, N. C., he agreed along with the other seven associate jus{ices on calling of the session. A court official, asked about Murphy’s status, pointed out that “a supreme court justice is the keeper

of his own conscience in deciding his eligibility.

10 MAP POLI WAR

Plans for a state organization to fight infantile paralysis in’ Indiana will - be discussed tomorrow at a regional conference of 5 county chapters in the Hurty auditorium of the state board of health building. Dr. Don W. Gudakunst. chief medical director of the National Foundation for Infantile Paralysis,

2

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pi ARE

RT

~ discuss “Recent Knowledge Gained Through Research on Poliomelitis.” Other speakers will be Governor Schricker, Dr. John W. Ferree, state health commissioner; Dr. C. T. Malan, state superintendent of public instruction,

and Dr. Howard B. Mettel, acting director for the department of services for crippled children. Dr. Mettel will outline the state's legislative plan for aiding children

§ can’t afford not to take advan-

and adults stricken with infantile paralysis.

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