Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 17 September 1942 — Page 4
{CALLS FOR FR OF SECURITY TAXES Ln s measure would set dent: Ro
WASHINGTON, Sepl. 11. (U. Bs fogie a envision. an the oats [oon ahs Gf © —Senator Arthur H. 1a, mes would, sutomatiolly fon tortiug me. B. Miki), suid day ties Leldreate. the iam levied
1 N' NF BACK fe rt IAPS IN PACIFIC
Eight Enemy Ships Blasted At Kiska, Cruisers at
Solomons Damaged. £ (Continued from Page One) [night and in ‘Gen. Douglas Mac- | Arthur's communique today. | The communique on two attacks fon the enemy in the Aleutians was {the “first mention of that fog{shrouded area since Aug. 22. But t told of a laige-scale attack by
City Officer Proud to Fight . With Americans This Time
(Continued from Page One)
my rifle. I got onto a freight train with hundreds of other soldiers. © “I didn’t know just where it was| going, but I was on top. of a box car} [tor three days and thres nights.| Then ‘We came to Czechoslovakia. | “There they started disarming all the soldiers in a depot: ‘When they| demanded my rifle, I said, ‘No.’ “I swung it above my. head and hit a wall, The rifile broke in four| pieces,”
Lost Weight in First War
Officer Izsak laughed. “They could have the pieces,” hel
Fam Labor Costs in
: _.- Computation. (Contiinea from Page One)
said, thought the president meant the “cost of ferm labor,” but that ally “the chief executive “meant cost of labor going into the things. the farmer buys—which is Fe in the parity formula.” | Barkley said the president's mese “tended to suggest that in adto the present parity formu- i
ihe cost of farm labor should be And so the first world war ended Tho misunderstanding, he said,|fro Samuel Izsak. &rose in “perfectly ood faith.” | When he went into the Austrian ) B.. Steagall (D. army, he weighed 170 pounds. In nine months he weighed 140. tee and aythor of the objection-
“I'll bet: Uncle 8am feeds me bet~ gible house bill, commented that the|ter than that in his army,” said president “did not like the way I| Officer Izsak. : ed it out-~the cost of labor—| In 1922, he left his homeland for : in the house bill.”
the great America and came to In-| .Steagall said ‘that he had takeh|dianapolis where he had two broth.|"% the president's phrase “in the best
ers, Morris and: Adolf, ad two sis~ i tpt from the farmers’ point off ters, Mrs. Loyise Lovinger and Mis, : n Wise, atked a helher: he|{ Ann: Samuels. would change the bill, et “Ill have to consult with my com- Final Papers in 1928 mittee before doing anything”: y i 1038, Ofer lzsak received his/: ya af i nal citizen Pp papers. ; President to Clarify Stand Forty-one years old now, he lives Barkley, meantime, said that thelat 3245% Kenwood ave. For nine senate banking committee expected|years he’s been on the police force to report its bill. today. The sen-|and he's spent about: four of the ‘ate bill=which has administration last five years at his Washingtonval—would authorize the pres-| pennsylvania sts. station. t to stabilize farm prices at{ when he goes into the armye ty or recent levels, and Wages ine american. one—it may make a
; levels of about Aug. 15. few motorists rest a bit easier. Ofi~ hy wu She Presiden Suid cer Izsak is a man who believes in en ! lic ma. |0ATTYINg out the law to the letter
1
: In addition to the enemy ships is _— and ‘damaged, 500 troops were . fkilled or wounded, six planes were tdestroyed and fire was set to store3 houses and supply dumps ‘ashore. | 8 | Not a single American plane was [lost during the attack as a result lof enemy action, the navy reported. _|Admiral Chesfer 'W. Nimitz reported Hin" ‘Pearl Harbor, however, that two “pilots ‘of P-33 fighters: were killed {when their planes collided. : : “Defenses Are Feeble. ¥ '] Also significant was the apparent| § i feebleness of the Japanese defenses at Kiska. The navy made no men«| § | {tion of enemy resistance to the|, “1“strafing attack” on Sept. 4. Of the low altitude bombing and strafing
attack on Sept. 14 during which most lof the damage was inflicted, the
Samuel Izsak . . , he expects + tobe better fed. '
THAN RIGHT
Anp the place to make such an investment is ROGERS + + + The Diamond Store of Indianapolis . . . 20 years of square dealing . . . Now serving the second generation.
An old, faded photograph of Officer Issak when he was mus-
. Claude R. Wickard, Price Adminis-
© offered to the hill,
house committees, clarifying his position. ke * Besides Barkley and Steagall, con-
—always, of course, with a smile.
tered out of the Autsrian army,
This time he's on the right side.
He is in the center.
navy said this:
ferees included Chairman Robert F. Wagner (D, N. Y.) of the senate banking committee and Senator Prentis Brown (D. Mich.)—coauthors of the senate anti-inflation bill—and Secretary of Agriculture
. trator Leon Henderson and Presi dential Advisers Harry L. Hop and Isadore Lubin.
G. 0. P. Senators Split
—
CO
‘commander;
aries Isaac C. Sharp, War- , Ind., Indiana state department junior vice com-
* Senate Republicans, meeting in a mander, Charles H. Perry, Minne-
hour caucus, failed t apolis, Bo-hour s 4 to Teach an Thomas Ridenour, Crestline,
chaplain-in-chief, Robert M. Round, Ripley, N. ¥.
agreement on their stand on the Hill, but promised to “co-operate in an effort to work-out a wise solution of the problem presented to the senate and the country.”
general, Russell
Minn.; surgeon general,
0.;
Appointed officers were: Adjutant C. Martin, of
Senate Republican Leader Charles| 08 Angeles; quartermaster-general,
L. McNary (Ore.) told reporters the Republicans! would meet again Saturday in_an attempt te reach sigreement on amendments to be { ‘McNary indicated
that such
<1t was reported in some circles that there might be a non-legis-lative compromise on the parity sue.
SWITCH BLAMED IN * BIG 4 RAIL CRASH
© (Continued from Page One)
tinder control by fire departments *from Charleston and Mattoon, Ill Acetylene torches were used - to reach the bodies of the engineer and fireman in the cab of the pas< senger locomotive which had tele- ~ scoped the freight engine. . The injured passengers were treated at hospitals ‘at Charleston and Mattoon. New York Central officials said all injuries were minor. The crack passenger train-was en route from New York to St. Louis when the wreck occurred at 8:18 Pp. m. near Ashmore, nine miles east here. A new train crew had been gaken aboard at Indianapolis. “The two engines were practically welded together,” Coroner Horace Clark said. “They were accordian pleated and wedged into each other, It took several hours to recover the bodies.” | The engineer of the oil train, which was compqsed of between 75 and 100 loaded tank cars, was on
ae a os II Ww
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ed late yesterday. National Women's Relief Corps, the auxiliary to the veteran's organisation; the Ladies of the G. A. R. and the Daughters of Union: Veterans.
* | president. Hoffmeyer, Others were:
Mary Josephine Cain; Charles S; Cain of Long Island, N. Y., and Rabert Cain of Indianapolis;
Eugene Owen, Grand Rapids, Miech.; judge advocate general, Thomas J. Noll, Des Moines, Iowa,
While an official announcement
was not made, it was said that Tulsa, Okla., was favored as the encampment city for next year.
Three affiliate organisations electThey were: The
Elections were held today by the
‘Sons of Union Veterans of the Civil [War and the Auxiliary te the Sons ‘lof Union Veterans.
The Woman's Relief corps elected an Indianapolis woman junior vice She was Mrs. Grace E. 1358 N. Tuxedo st. President, Mrs, Louise
the ground when the limited roared through the switch. He shouted a warning to his fireman who leaped from the cab. The fireman was scalded, steam.
however, by escaping
Mr. Cain wag born in Union City,
Ind, and had lived here 35 years. He had worked for the Big Four 45 years as a fireman and engineer. He was a member of Little Flower Catholic parish and of the Brotherhood of Railroad Trainmen.
He is survived by his wife, Mrs. two sons,
two daughters, Mrs. Regene Mc-
Guire of Indianapolis and Miss Bernice Cain‘ of Tallahassee, sister, Mrs.
Fla.; a Mame Bearss of Lafayette, and five grandchildren. Mr. Hooten, a native of Tennessee, is survived by his wife, Mrs. Thelma Hooten, and three children, Donald, Robert and Sarah Hooten. He had worked for the railroad 18 years, . Mr, Watjen was born in Monroe
apolis last December. He is sur=
G. A. R. Chooses Coast Man As Commander-in-Chief
(Continued from Page One)
City, Ind.,, and moved to Indian-|
Haider, Saiita Barbara, Cal., former senior vice. president, succeeding Mrs May L. Luchsinger of Monroe, Wis.; * senior viée . president, Mrs. Anna Anschutz of St. Louis, Mo., former junior vice president; treasurer, Mrs, Katherine Antrim of Chis cago, and chaplain, Mrs. Orpha Turner of Fairfield, Ia. = = The Ladiestof the G. A. R, elected as its president Mrs. Gladys W. Newton of Charleston, W. V., a member of ‘the department of New York. The Daughters of Union Veterats elected the following: . President, Mrs. Erma H. Chaplin of Oakland; Cal.; senior vice president, Miss Ora Cox of Portland, Ore.; treasurer, Miss Grace Hurd of Washington; D. C.;' chaplain, Emma McLaughlin of Elm Grove, W. Va, all unopposed for re-election. Following the Grand-Army’s final business session the “boys in blue’ who remained in. the. city were given & rest period until ‘the public; concert of the famed U.S, Marine band at the Fairgrounds coliseum’ at 8 p. m. It is the only event on the G. A. R. calendar to ‘which the public has been invited, The concert | # will be free of charge: for the pubs lic as well as the G. A. R.
" Camp Fire Meeting Held
The traditional camp fire migets ing in the English theater last night took the veterans back to their fighting days of the Civil war.
Reminiscenses of '61 to '65 caused their pulses to thump just a little harder and poised them for renewed vigor in “heme front” activities of world war ‘II when they. return home. ‘Solidarity of the U. S. championed by these Union soldiers:was- lauded by Brig. Gen. Frank T.” Hines, ad= ministrator -of U. S.: veterans’ administration. He told them their efforts and sacrifices “made possible the unmatched strength which we, possess today .as the greatest and
anywhere in. the history of the world.” Congressman Louis Ludlow praised the Grand Army of the Republic 2s “The Grand Army. of the World.” Fifty-fwo veterans were registered on the official encampment roll by Arthur C. Bennett, registrar. They came from as far away as Califor
vived by his wife, Mrs. Georgianna
Watjen.
‘nia and Maine.
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{anti-aircraft resistance.”
“Irines on Guadalcanal are not engaged solely in defensive fighting.
;jand the marines are ‘still holding ¥ their positions.: Marine patrols con»
strongest nation that has existed]:
{small craft.”
- |{ “zero” fighters, a large patrol plane '|and one small seaplane. ERSONNEL
5
4 TOUGH CORD” SOLES
i
“The enemy attempted fo repel this attack with planes and weak
The navy disclosed that the ma-
It reported that marine patrols wefe active, indicating that they were seeking to flush out enemy detach‘ments in the interior jungles of the islands. Meanwhile, army flying fortresses and navy and marine corps dive! bombers and torpedo planes ranged over the northwestern Solomons, carrying the fight to the enemy. They intercepted a force of Japanese cruisers and ‘destroyers off Choiseul island, about 200 ‘miles from Guadalcanal. Two of the cruisers were hit, raising to at least 22 the numbew of Japaneie ships sunk or damaged since the marines Quunchiog the Solomons offensive Aug. 1 : oo. Santa Isabel Raided Again
‘The flying fortresses, for the second time in two days, struck at Rekata bay on Santa Isabel island, about 140° miles west of Guadalcanal, Shore installations were bombed and set afire. Gen. MacArthur's bombers started fires in ‘the dispersal dreas of Buki, northernmost of the Solomons; and nidde ‘a might attdek” én “Rabaul; New Britain, with uncertain results, Discussing the progress of the battle on Guadalcanal, the navy’s latest communique on south Pacific action said: “The intensity &f-the fighting on Guadalcanal island has decreased
tinue active.” - Fighters Get Extra Gas Tanks
This was a cheerful contrast to Tuesday’s - announcement that the Japanese had been making violent attempts by land, sea and air since last Saturday to. retake Guadalcanal. Aside from the losses inflicted on the Japanese, the navy’s announce[ment of the action in the Aleutians was significant because of its disclosure that ‘land-based American fighters, which normally have a comparatively ' short flying range, have heen equipped with extra gas
as those used by Japanese fighter planes. Nearest American base to Kiska is Dutch Harbor, about 650 miles to the east.
Jap Losses Listed
The big bomber-fighter raid on Kiska occurred last Monday, the navy said. These ‘were the: 1ouses inflicted on the enemy: - SUNK~Two ‘mine sweepers. DAMAGED — Three submarines. three iarge cargo ships and “several
PLANES DESTROYED — Four
ahi A
fs
tanks, perhaps “belly" tanks suchll
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