Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 14 October 1942 — Page 7
~ WIFE IS DEAD Mrs. Esther Greenwald Took Part in Many
Jewish Activities.
“Mrs, Esther Greenwald, wite of Pp Greenwald, owner of the meat] market bearing his name at 26 N. Delaware st., died today in her home, 8125 N. Pennsylvania st. She was 55. Mrs. Greenwald was a lifelong
aldo an'the offensive on the land ttset or ol pe Sa 88 Whe Amite - fn, et yet prepared for a major northward sweep Ha the ‘southwestern Pacific, took a gamble in occupy- | ing the Guadal air ‘field and Tulagi harbor. The gamble was born lof. necessity and: was, primarily defensive instead of offensive. Had the Japanese been alle to consolidate and develop their hold in the Solo.mons, ‘there have been ‘a grave, ogy
* * Stimson Says. (Continued from. Page One)
Lewis B. Hershey, selective service| director, Sasa thatagiry wire
. | exceeded. ‘Mr, Stimson expressed opposition | : % en a bill that
have the Japanese‘'on the run, feels able to express confidence’ that the + |marines will be able to hold the
resident of Indianapolis ‘and was born here Dec, 12, 1886. © * * She was a member of the Beth . El Sisterhood, the Ladies Auxiliary of ‘the Jewish Educational associa- » the Borinstein Home for the Aged, Ohev Zedeck Benevolent: Society and Hadassah. Survivors are three sisters, Mrs. Rose Wormser, Brooklyn, N. Y.; Mrs. Ann Rothschild, Los Angeles, Cal, and Miss Lena Glick, Chicago, and one brother, Harry ‘Glick, Toledo, O.
Funeral services will be held at i
the Aaron-Ruben funeral home but the time has not been set.
DETAIN MAN, 69, IN STREET BRAWL
“A 69-year-old man who had been reported making alleged seditious remarks about the government and some adverse predictions about the ‘outcome of the war, was arrested by. police. last night. on a, North side street corner. ~ He was being held in jail today pending investigation of his activities and connections. Police officers ‘reported that the man was threatening fisticuffs with a neighbor When they arrived in answer to Bomplaints.
‘2 HOOSIER OFFICERS CITED * THIRD ARMY HEADQUARTERS IN LOUISIANA, Oct. 14 (U. P.) —High-ranking officers of the d .army yesterday issued citans for outstanding work in comrh maneuvers. Officers mentioned included Col. Robert L. Stillwell of Evansville, Ind., and Capt. Wiley P. McCoun of New Albany, Ind.
bedtime rub old Vicks VanaRab ry Shrcat chest a and baci. Then watch its PERETRATIG: from: STATING tion : It PENETRATES ing passages lo t soctiing medicinal vapors. It chest and back surfaces like a
. tice... and it keeps on wor! Pte
while you sléep — to ease even y 0
WASHINGTON, Oct. 14 (U.P.). —The bodies of the six Nazi agents executed here Aug. 8 are buried in the Potter's Field with
wooden headboards bearing numbers instead of names. ‘They are separated from paupers’ graves’ by a wire fence.
The bodies were unclaimed by relatives, although two of the saboteurs had wives in the United States. They were buried after lying unclaimed about a week at Walter Reed: hospital. The numbers on the headboards range from 276 to 281, and miark the graves of Herbert Hans Haupt,
Only erude boards and numbers mark the graves of the six Nasi ‘saboteurs executed by the federal government on Aug. 8. Above are shown five of the six graves. in the. Potter's Field addition at Blue Plains, government reservation in Washington, D. C. : i
‘Richard Quirlin, Edward .Kerling, : Werner Thiel, Hermann Neubauer and ‘Heinrich Heincke, who were landed on the East coast from
‘submarines. Two others, George
John Dasch and Ernest Peter. ‘Burger, were given long prison sentences by the military commission which heard the case.
MALTA KEY TO
CHANGE IN WAR|
Island Downs 60 Axis Planes This Week; Russ
Lull Continues. (Continued from Page One)
shot down with a -loss of four Italian planes and that another nine allied planes were destroyed over Africa. The ‘Russian front which only a week ago was blazing with some of the bitterest fighting of the war was comparatively calm,
Russians Claim Small Gains
Moscow reports indicatéd that at least a partial initiative was passing into Soviet : hands all ‘along. the front. Red army troops inside Stalingrad and both north and south of the steel city made slight -advances and the battle lines in the Caucasus were holding firm. Berlin admitted that the Russians were counter-attacking both « at Stalingrad - and along the Don river but insisted all these moves
were repulsed. Nazi air getivity was
said to be concentrating. against Soviet transport: lines east of the Volga while -in the Caucasus some gains were claimed. One axis report placed the Germans only 12% miles from Tuapse. The Berlin radio emphasized the growing bad weather which was enveloping the eastern front. Heavy downpours were reported on the northern and central fronts while in Karelia snow and rain were said to bog all movements.
MARINES TO HOLD, ~~ NIMITZ DEGLARES
HEADQUARTERS, UNITED STATES PACIFIC FLEET, PEARL HARBOR, Oct. 13 (U. P.).—(Delayed)—Admiral Chester W. Nimitz, commander in chief of the Pacific fleet, said today that he had the
Jutmost confidence the marines in
the Solomon islands would hold-what they have and eventually start rolling northward. He said he had every reason to
. {continue his optimism regarding the
| elou chimge am Atty morse eg nge ’ ve complaints, underight, ness; loss of appotine.bytwo important steps: 1 —=Promote the flow of vital digestive juices inthe stomach : 2- Energize your body with
_RICH RED § BLOOD!
eventual outcome of the war. But he said his statement must not be misinterpreted to indicate that the united nations had the Japanese on the run. It was the third press conference Admiral ‘Nimitz has held in the 10 months since he took over the Pacific command after Pearl .Harbor and his hearers were the more. impressed by what he said because he
1 1a close mouthed.
ALLEGED BOOKIE” oN W. MARKET RAIDED
: A woman walked up to a police officer at Capitol and Market sts.
her husband had been losing money in an alleged “bookie” shop nearby. The police officer notified headquarters and a place in the 100 block, -W. Market st., was raided. They arrested a man giving his name as Jack Williams and charged him with a gaming place, Police confiscated $72 found ‘in the
yesterday and ‘old him that she‘and|
Five Indiana nién were Yeported dead, ‘seven wounde and nine missing by a navy casualty list announced today and covering ‘the period from Sept. 22 to Sept. 30. Of the ‘Hoosiers, one from Indianapolis was reported dead, two wounded and one missing. Reported dead was Brady Allen Dalton, seaman second class, ‘who
the son of Mrs. Iva M. Head, 1101 Waldemere ave. The wounded men were Lioyd| . Bice Cowin, seaman second class, son of Clinton R. Cowin, 1402 Ray st., and William ‘Rudolph’ Sasek, machinist’s mate first class, husband | of Mrs. Mary Sasek, 1914 Sugar Grove ave., and son of Mr. and Mrs. Louis Sasek, 913 Ketcham st. ' The missing serviceman is Steven Joseph Galovic, fire controlman first class, son of Mrs. Bessie Ann Klinger, 917 "Tibbs ave. Machinist Sasek, 28, is in a San
Diego, Cal, naval hospital and his
according to the announcement, is|.
Navy Lists 5 Hoosiers Dead, AF Wounded and 9 Missing
wife Mary is with him. His parents were notified more than two" weeks ago that he had been wounded in the arm by shrapnel. Sasek is a gradudte of" Technical high school and joined the navy first in 1934. After his first “hitch” of four years, he joined the naval reserve and was called to regular service in 1940. Fireman Galovic, reported ‘missing, is 29 and has been in the navy more than eight years. A graduate of Washington high school, Pearl. Harbor at the outbreak of the war. . His. mother was notified Sept. 22 that he was missing. - Galovic has a brother, Edward F.,
* 130, who was in the navy for 10. years
and who now is in the government employ in Hawaii. Another’ brother, Bernard, is planning to enter. the merchant marine immediately, The missing man also has a brother, George, 33, and a sister, Mary.
Plans were’ hearing cortipletion today for the. gasoline ration registration Nov.'9 in Indiaha schools. James D. Strickland, state, OPA director, said that William Aitchison, state gasoline ration officer, and Clement T. Malan, state schools superintendent, would meet at 10
tails of using school buildings. for the registration. Gasoline rationing will start Nov. 22. . Mr. Strickland said that 124 gasoline “panels” had been appointed throughout the state to administer the rationing and that all plants in Marion county .employing 300 or more. had set up.plant transportation administration committees. to pass on workers’ requests. He added that he was attempting now to arrange places other than registration points where motorists might obtain applications, later to be tdrned in to the boards. This, he felt, will facilitate registration. Mr, Strickland added that Kenneth M. Kunkel, state ration officer, and Mrs. Aitchison would go.to Chicago Sunday for a two-day training school on the conduct of the ration. The registration, according - to a statement yesterday in Washington by Price Administrator Leon Henderson, will be for “A” books, which provide for sufficient gasoline to drive an average of 2880 miles a year—four gallons a week. : Meanwhile from Washington it was reported that motorists will be required to pay a nominal fee to
Box Score In Solomons By UNITED PRESS .
JAPANESE LOSSES
Probably Dam. ' Sunk Sunk aged Total
Type . 18 2 14
a. m. tomorrow to work out the de-|
Indiana Drivers Register
Nov. 9 for Gas Ration Cards|
ovararent » appointed. nispedhors —filling: station operators—to méke periodic checks ‘on their tires. The charge will probably range -from 25
whether the inspector: finds it necessary to remove tires from the rims to determine their condition. The tire-check was decreed yesterday by Price Administrator Leon Henderson as part of the program for nation-wide gasoline rationing. After Nov. 22 it will be illegal for a passenger car with more than five ‘tires to be on the road. Plans for government-purchase of excess tires will be disclosed tomorrow and it .s. ‘expected - ‘that’ car owners’ will réceive the ‘established ceiling" prices ‘for used: tires. Under. the expanded gasoline rationing program, every passenger car owner will file the serial numbers of all the-tires in his possessioh with the local rationing beard between. Nov. 9 and Nov. 22. Officials
{ pointed: out’ that in that way the
government will obtain its first inventory of automobile tires, Must Sell Extras Beéfore motorists in the now unrationed: area: ¢an obtain coupon ration books, they must. certify that they have sold their extra tires to the government. In the 17 states where rationing has been in effect since July 21, owners of passenger vehicles ‘must certify that they have done likewise or their books will be taken up. Estimates on the number of tires that will be added to the stockpile by taking up all over five per:car ranged from 3,000,000 to 10,000,000, but government officials frankly admitted that it was 4 guess. Holders of coupon books will be entitled to apply for recaps when-
depend on the nature of the driving and the current state of the rubber supply, OPA officials said.
CENTRAL ‘Y’ PLANS FITNESS’ INSTITUTE
‘The Central Y. M. C. 'A. will
“|sponsor a three-day ‘Fitness for
Vickey institute beginning: Bday,
Galovic was wounded at|
cents. to about $1.50, depending ‘on.
would prohibit Sending. 18-ygar-they have received at least. a. years|
“Our purpose,” "Gen. Marshall said, “is to keep the War out of the western hemisphere, = Our. deter-
sive and keep it.” In. {illustrating the need for younger men, Gen. Marshall said that a -week ago last Sunday he visited a: 3500-bed army hospital and was “shocked at what I saw.” “There were old men,” he said, “some of them in the army only a few days. Taking men like that is not increasing the army, it is reducing the army.” - He said he found one 43-year-old man, suffering from four complaints including angina pectoris— a heart ailment—and hernia, who had been a mechanic. “That man,” he said, “is a burden to us.” Sees No Other Solution Under such conditions, Gen. Marshall added, the army will have to enlarge its hospital facilities even before it gets troops into action. ‘Gen. Marshall, who set the stage
Mihiel offensives of world war I, said that in that conflict “everything was on a stabilized basis” and that it was possible to move troops into: the trenches without as much training as is now required. ] .-Now, he said, troops must be organized into -a “highly geared, highly complicated machine.” Gen. Marshall went to the senate committee after listening to Mr. Stimson testify before the house committee. He said he could be “much more convincing” about the
its plans if he could “talk with complete frankness.” “But I would also endanger the lives of thousands of men,” he explained. Maximum Figure Set Mr. Stimson was asked by Rep. Dewey Short (R. Mo.), whether he believes “that an army. of 7,500,000 is the largest well-equipped and efficient .army that we can build at
Mr, Stimson, said the war department, ‘in. the light of . praduction |: plans. for 1943, plans creation of the “largest air force and supporting troops that are possible.” . Senator Sheridan Downey, (D. Cal), said that there are “only about 1,500,000 youths in the 18-19 age bracket—although census bpreau estimates place the number at
-0id} recruits to foreign battlefields unt
training. He said he sympathized |. with that objective and that sucha rule would be: followed in most mM stances. © But emergencies might} arise’ that, would make it necessary| ta Send. men; abioad with less train4 y
| ing.
mined purpose is. to take the offen-|
for ‘the MeusesArgonne and -St.|
care with which the army has made].
Me. Cle W. Ti "Mrs, CHiarles W. Tillett, assistant
chairman. of the Democratic. na‘tional committee, "will address
' ‘members of three county Demo-
cratic women’s clubs at 8 p. m. tomorrow at. the Claypool hotel. ; ‘This willbe: the largest rally dof Democratic women during the present campaign, party leaders said.’
Other speakers at the rally will be Governor Schricker and Judge Dewey E. Myers, Democratic candidate for mayor. During the 1936 and 1940 came paigns, Mrs. Tillett was director of the speakers bureau of the women’s division of the Democratic ‘national: committee. - Her husband is past president of the North Carolina Bar association. :
LAUD CITIZENS’ SCHOOL RECORD
Speakers at N.. Side Rally Point to Candidates of Last 12 Years.
The records of the school board members who have served during the last 12 years were praised by| 8 citizens’ school committee candidates at an organization meeting last night at the Rauh Memorial | § library. : The somniities has sponsored the election of the school board members. Last night's meeting was attended by North side ward and precinct workers.” The candidates for election Nov. 3 are Mrs. Eldo 1. Wagner, Howard S. Young, Clarence
-|Farrington, Edgar A. Perkins and
Dr. Harry G. Mayer. Harry Champ, ‘executive secretary of the committee, told the workers that they were not working for the committee’s slate alone; but they were Supporting a “worthy, just cause.” : In introducing the candidates, Mr. Champ pointed out the randi-
the city but *“They have all the qualifications ‘that we think 'a school commissioner should have— namely, ability, sincerity and hon-
2,500,000. He asked Gen. Marshall | esty
how he expected to bring any “major relief” to the army by in-
many of whom are already in ‘the armed services or working in defense industries. Gen: Marshall replied that he hoped some of the older and ineffective men: might be released to war industries: where their services would be most useful. ‘ -Congress appeared likely to approve by mid-November, at least, the legislation for drafting the 18 and 19-year-olds for military service. House Leader Sam Rayburn said there was a good chance that the house would approve the legislation by Saturday. The bill offered in the house would prohibit the army from sending men below 20 years of age to the front until they have had a year of training and would allow 18-year-olds to finish the school year in which they reached 18 before induction.
PLANS INDIANA NOVEL FRENCH LICK, Oct. 14 (U.-P.).|on —Fannie Hurst, novelist, said teoday she planned to spend a few days: at French Lick Springs. to gather material and packground for a new book. She has just comPloted a war bond tour of the
duction of such a small number,|.
FIVE MORE LOCAL
last week. They were: Mary K. Miller, 2043
den hotel, and Winona E. Watson, 2535 N. Delaware st.
Y a oun oes old TABGY mean a pt know this help?
fashioned notion that certain intimate facts form a forbidden topic of conversation. That's why many women who have suffered the cramp-like agony and nervous strain of periodic, functional distress at least know about CARDUL Try CARDUI, which may help in e of two ways: (1) as a tonic, i y pep up appetite, aid digestion, thus help build up energy for “time”. to come; (2) started 3 before the time, and taken as directed, it may aid in relieving purely functional, periodic pain. Women have praised CARDUI's
oy and the days
RS ET'S ALL PULL TOGETHER
help for 62 years. Try it!
{Reavy shatiers, butchiad bee, partly
|their fleet’ in a major engagement.
dates had been “drafted” and had, not sought their places on the committee.” He said the committee did| not claim that the candidates were the only five qualified persons in|
WOMEN JOIN WAACS| Zi
Five more Indianapolis women| {\ ‘were enlisted as WAAC auxiliaries
N. Delaware st.; Mary M. Snyder, 961 W. 29th st. Violet E. Killian, 21 § W. 16th st.; Margaret J. Irish, Lin-!
Very few. women cling to the old- 3
offset by the sinking of af least one Japanese” cruiser, fouf destroyers and a transport. “ American military men aorioede that the Japanese should be able to drive us out of the Solomons if
they are. willing to pay the price. To do it, they would have to risk
Since the. battles of Midway and the Coral sea, they have shown no in-, clination to do so. The Japanese fleet would be at a disadvantage in such an attack. The three lost American cruisers have been replaced and Japanese ships would be up against landbased planes. Hence Admiral Chester W. Nimitz, commander of the Pacific fleet, al-
If they do, it will be the eventual starting - point ‘for an American drive to roll the Japanese ‘back {rom New Guinea and their strong base at Rabaul on New Britain and begin the offensive for the Philippines and the Dutch Indies. Japanese strength in the southwestern: Pacific must not be underestimated. They are known to have about. 60,000 men in the islands of Melanesia. What they have in the mandated : islands to the north is not known. Only recently the Japanese ‘had 30,000 men at Rabaul alone, It is their biggest: base in the area and they are improving it constantly. That is the reason for the incessant raids there by American landbased: bombers, which are, able ‘to use Port’ Moresby -on New Guinea as" a refueling ‘place on their Highs from Australia,
though admitting that we do not
Cre Pa
% Hamilton %* Waltham % Bulova
-Open a Rost Charge
PAY WEEKLY OR MONTHLY
No Interest Added
(BLS fe
bh 1942
holt he [pai ofnb 94
ANC
“Rost Special”
¢ i WATCH SALE
but Subject ‘to Prior ‘Selling
. Choose Now for Christmas! ~ Good Watches Are Scarce!
‘Smarty styled, depandably timepieces at a price we will not be able to duplicate. We also feature Indiana's largest assortment of such nationally famous watches as
% Elgin % Gruen .% Benrus’
SUCRE ERY)
WAS DOWN T0
“] Look and Feel So Much FC Better: My. Friends Are Astonished,” States Happy Mrs. Godfrey. Tells of Her Case,
at
. }land I was forced to take a strong Al 1axative
almost every day that
Advertisemen
ONLY 83
POUNDS; REGAINS 20 LBS. TAKING RETONGA
Er
fe
