Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 14 November 1942 — Page 3

CH GAVE UP

HOUT A FIGHT!

Well Greased Capitulation of Ft. of Ft. Sidi- Ferruch Enabled Writer and Commandos to ‘Walk Right in Gate.’

bd

(American War Correspondent

By WILLIAM H. STONEMAN

With A. E. F. in North Africa)

Copyright, 1942, by’ The Indianapolis Times and The Chicago Daily News, Inc.

. SOMEWHERE IN ALGERIA, Nov. 12.—The American

success in Algeria was cinched within a half-hour of the zero

hour i in the early hours of Sunday, morning (Nov. 8).

It was made possible by the well-greased capitulation of

. Ft. Sidi-Ferruch, a strong point commanding our principal

landing beaches on the coast Algiers.

15 miles west of ¢he city of

Four of us—two commando offieers, a friendly French

officer whom we had encountered in the darkness and myself —walked right into the

main gate of the fort 20 min- . utes after we had scrambled ashore with the first assault force. .Still dripping from. the surf, we shook hands with the commander of the garrison, which far outnumbered our own force, and were

assured he did not wish to resist,

us. He showed us an order he had received the _previous evening in- { structing the local commanders to “facilitate the debarkations and the

establishment ashore of the Ameri-

can troops.” Fort Well Protected Sidi-Ferruch, which we had expected to take by assault, was far more potent than we had dreamed. It had four naval guns and plenty of Hotchkiss machine guns. If we had had to fight for it we might not have taken it and we certainly would not have taken it within the

" 20-minutes allowed us.

$

‘If it had opposed us, the landing of our main forces on adjacent beaches would have been jammed badly, but once Sidi-Ferruch was in our hands it was simply a question of getting our main combat team and its equipment ashore and crashing on eastward to high ground overlooking Algiers from the west. If we could do it by dawn and

before the Vichy people had time

to countermand the orders, then

we'd probably force the city’s capit-

ulation without a shot being fired ; by our particular force. If it proved impossible to follow our very.tight and optimistic landing schedule and our troops did} not push 15 miles eastward by dawn, then there almost certainly would be some’ shooting before the

city fell. As -it turned. out; JOUL

4. troops did not keep up to schedule ‘and the shotting occurred. . Commando Bluffs Blida We passed a wild night trying to capitalize on: our coup, and we were only partly successful. There was a delicate situation at the Blida airdrome, 18 miles south. Wisely disregarding a previous order, Lieut. Col. Tom Trevor, of the commandos, dashed off to Blida in some camions (motor trucks) with 150 men and within an hour had cajoled and bluffed his way into possession of the town and the airdrome. I set off In a frantic effort to locate our combat team and get them on to Ft. I'Empereur, the western bastion of Algiers, before dawn spoiled our game. What we found was a single bat-

talion, led by a tired lieutenant)

colonel, which had been landed miles away from its designated ‘beach. When we found it, about 4 a. m., it was stretched out over a distance of three or four miles and the vanguard was still 10 miles from Ft. 'Empereur, with a bare two hours in which to make. it. Needless to say, the vanguard did

not make it, and that was why the|§

same battalion had to fight its way

through the region of el Biar Sun-|{

day" afternoon.

Toward dawn we found another : ~ battalion sitting by a roadside near ||

Ft. Sidi-Ferruch and it, like the

other battalion, had. neither can-

non, ‘heavy machine guns nor vehicles with it. | “Kidnaps” a General

fp ‘It must have been 9 o'clock in the : ~ morning when I found a brigadier; 3 genera) plodding along the road andi! m; to kidnap him for an in- :

b of Fram and went with iced skirmishes as they blazed way down the long main street bh re comic opera intruded into at allied expedition to North when a small army of ‘boys who never had heard

There was nothing funny about sti shooting: take it from your cor-

he comedy was provided by our French civilian friends and by those strangest of all people, the Arabs. ~~ French snipers and machinegunners had established themselves in a barracks just west of the ‘Algiers suburb earlfer in the day and the battle occurred” when our decided it was {ime to stop around. * French Retire Reluctantly "Fire from 25-pound mortars and machine guns drove the French out "of the barracks back into town, through - which they retired relucaly, siping h om houses as they

3 v found our tors sneaking from “tree to lamppost, ducking odd shots and bursts of machine-gun fire,

of their fire. Now and then a small batch of prisoners. would be led in. Bullets clipped branches off trees above our heads. This, cowboy and Indian performance apparently was just what the locals had been waiting, for all their lives. While rifles cracked, family groups including papa, mama, grandma, grandpa and all of the little ones stood on the sidewalks gazing enraptured at the spectacle. The village braggart lounged in a door-

critical remarks and recounting his feats at Verdun to a group of local loafers. During one lull in the fighting everybody: was invited into a local cafe for a glass of vin rouge—on the house.

Milkman Unscathed

During the earsplitting tornado of machinegun fire the local milkman came dashing by oh his cart, accompanied by. pere and. mere, and went right through a hail of fire without a scratch,

down the column after he had been searched, while kids from New York, Virginia and Alabama looked openmouthed at his gay, red fez and voluminous white : cloak. “Geez,” said an irreverent New

| Yorker, “this guy must be going

home from lodge meeting.”

SOUTH MARKET TRUCKER DEAD

Charles” Davidson, Former Comission: Merchant, ll Long Time. Charles W. Davidson died yesterday at the home of his sister, Mrs. Martha Dunn, 2308 W. Morris st., after a long illness. He was 74. A resident of Indianapolis 66 years, Mr. Davidson was for many years a commission merchant and later a trucker at the South Side market. He was a member of’ Samaritan lodge, I. O. O. F.; Indianapolis lodge 669, F. & A. M., and the Blaine Avenue Church of Christ. Survivors are four sons, Omer, Edgar, Walter and Charles; two sisters, Mrs. Robert Haverstick and Mrs. Dunn; five grandchildren and two great-grandchildren, all of Indianapolis. Funeral services will be held Monday at the W. D. Beanblossom mortuary, 1321 W. Raymond st., with : burial in Floral Park cemetery. ‘

Kiwanis Guest :

f 0. E. Peterson

The Indianapolis Kiwanis club will be host to the secretary of Kiwanis International, O. E. “Pete” Peterson, at its meeting Wednesday noon in the Columbia club. Mr. Peterson is the managing ‘| officer of Kiwanis International and has charge of the general office in Chicago. He is a member of the Hyde Park, Chicago, Kiwanis club. Joining the Kiwanis Internationa] staff in 1936 as convention mana-

ventions in Indiangpolis, San Francisco, Boston, Minneapolis and Atlanta, He received his education at Hamline university, St. Paul. * For six years he was employed in the personnel department of the U. S.

ecutive branches of the Chicago ¥. M. C. A. He is now on the board of directors of the Hyde Park Y. M. C. A. Mr. Peterson lives in Crown Point.

PENSIONERS TO MEET ndiana ]

ger, Mr. Peterson managed con-|

Steel Corp. and later ‘became ex-| Indiana ‘Secretary of several Ss

h

cl the

way of his tobacco shop, making| gi

This picture is among the first to reach the United States showing allied forces invading French North Africa. - With the Stars and Stripes already flying, American soldiers are shown landing equipment A lone Arab on a mule passed} at a point west of Oran in Algeria. This picture was cabled by the British Newsreel association in London to Acme News Pictures in New York and then telephotoed to The Indianapolis Times.

- |by Glen Barnett.

The first annual reunion of the Indiana squadron of Navy clubs of America will be held tomorrow at the world war memorial. The program will start at 10 a. m. Speakers will include Lieut. Comm. F. M. Hall, senior medical officer in charge of the Indiana recruiting area, and Paul Fisher, vice president of the navy league for Indiana and treasurer of the Indian-

| apolis Life Insurance Co. Mr. Fisher

will speak in the morning and Comm, Hall in the afternoon. Other speakers will be L. T. Dwyer, Indiana Navy day chairman and president of the Navy Boosters club, and Capt. Ralph E, Boulton, officer in charge of marine corps recruiting for Indiana and senior executive officer of the Indianapolis ship of the Navy club. : New state officers will be elected and plans made for - co-operating

coast guard recruiting drives "during the year. Comm, Hall first enlisted in the navy in 1918 as an apprentice seaman. - He was commissioned a medical officer in the naval reserve in 1934, serving as senior medical officer aboard the Sacramento and as medical officer at the naval armory here. . He returned to active service in July, 1940, and has been attached to the navy recruiting station in the Federal building since April, 1941. He has been commandant of the Lafayette “ship” of the Navy club. The Navy club is composed of men who have served or who are now. serving in the navy, marine

: lcorps and coast guard. Six clubs 1

or “ships” are located in Indiana at Frankfort, Lafayette, Kokomo, Anderson, Vincennes and Indianapolis. The national commandant is L. L. Messmore of Frankfort, State officers include F. E. Riling, Anderson, commandant, and William H, Williams, Kokomo, shipwriter. Howard C. Caldwell is commandant of the Indianapolis ship, whose delegates to the reunion are Thomas H. Luckett and Warrant Officer I. L. Longer, U. S. navy recruiting office,

LOCOMOTIVE KILLS TWO

LOGANSPORT, Nov. 14 (U. P.).— Mrs. Effie Eppert, 52, and Robert Ep-

£ | pert, 29, both of Toledo, O., were | killed nstantly today when their §| car struck a small locomotive on a 8, grade crossing three miles east of

here. Bath suffered skull fractures.

with the navy, marine corps, and.

Six Navy Clubs of Indiana To Hold First Reunion Here

&

Lieut. Comm. Hall .

3 Local Youths Get Navy Wings

. THREE Indianapolis. men were awarded their “navy wings of gold” recently: and commissioned ensigns in -the naval reserve at the naval «air. training - center, Corpus Christi, Tex. The new ~en‘signs . are Angelo Angelopolous, son of Mr. and Mrs. ‘George Angelopolous, 166 Geisendorf st., a former student of Butler university and 3 a former staff ’ member of the T. D. Willman “Indiana polis News; Thomas D. Willman, son of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas E. Willman, 3635 Birchwood ave., enlisted in October, 1941, and is a former student .of Butler and Indiana universities, and John H. Evans, son of ‘Mr. and Mrs. William R. Evans, 5019 N. Meridian st., a former student of Wabash college. “They received their. preliminary flight training at the Glenview, Ill, reserve. air base.

COUNTY COUNCIL TAKES OFFICE

Republicans Take Control "With a Majority of

Six to One.

The first of the new officials elected here Nov. 3—members of the county council—took office at the court house today.

president and Charles O. Sutton, vice president.

licans and one a Democrat. Republican members are Mr. Sutton, R, R. 4; George R. Hollingsworth, New Augusta; Mr. Parry, 4822 Central ave.; Russell E. Hutchinson, * Acton; William W, Taylor, 1501 W, 22d ‘st.; Sherlie- A. Deming, 3636 Carrollton ave. The Democrat on the council, which for the last four years was five to seven Democratic, is Raymond Sariders, 1309 E. Raymond st. They were given the. oath of office yesterday by Judge Dan V. White, probate judge- elect.

“$frosty night, the third in which {Modoc has been at large.

‘church will sponsor a chicken sup-

Addison J. Parry was elected

Six of the members are Repub-

MODOC PLAYS "HIDE AND SEEK

Takes Refuge in Woods So Dense the Hoot Owis

Hoot All Day.

HUNTINGTON, Ind, Nov. 14 [U. P.) —Modoc, the frightened elephant who has upset two counties, played hide-and-seek today with state police, sheriff's deputies and trainers in woods “so thick the hoot owls hoot all day.” Pot flares were. placed around the

40-acre thicket last night, where the 1900-pound Modoc last: was seen. Six state police cars patrolled highways to keep the curious away and the elephant confined. Fifteen or ' 20 other men kept watch during the

The elephant posse hoped Modoc would not repeat her disappearing act of Thursday night, when she was surrounded on the banks of the Wabash river near Lagro. Her bewildered flight yesterday resulted in critical injuries to one startled -farmer who stumbled in front of her while he was running for safety,

Kenneth Kindley, Mt. Etna, the victim, was reported in a critical condition today. Modoc, who has wandered from Wabash into Huntington county under jurisdiction of Sheriff: Marvin Idle, rested last night on land owned

“It’s deep woods and thicket there,’} Idle said.. “The sun hardly gets through during the daytime and the trees are so thick the hoot owls hoot all day.” Terrell Jacobs, Peru, Ind. ownertrainer of Modoc, plans today to make another attempt to decoying the wayward elephant back to civilization by” staking out Empress and Judy, her two companions in a pachyderm “sister” act. Jacobs was convinced that the frightened Modoc; valued at $6000, would be pacified by the presence. of her own kind.

GOLDEN RULE PLANS SUPPER

The Golden Rule Sunday school class of the Lawrence Methodist

per in the church basement Wednes-

Eli Lilly Heads Committee

Eli Lilly, civie and business leader, will serve as general chairm an of the 1942 tuberculosis Christmas seal sale for Indianapolis and Marion county. Goal for the .sale has been set at $60,000, or $3000 more than was raised a year ago. Serving with Mr. Lilly will be Mrs. Frederic M. Ayres, Louis J. Borinstein, Edward W. Dirks, Mrs. Robert D. Coleman, Rabbi Morris M. Feuetlicht, Adolph J. Fritz, Fred 'C. Hasselbring, the Rev. Harold H. Hazenfield, Harry W. Hobbs, Dr. A. W. Miller, DeWitt S. Morgan, Dr. Herman G. Morgan, Miss Blanche E. Penrod, The Most Rev. Joseph E. Ritter, D, D., James Robb and Adolph Seidensticker.

The Marion County Tuberculosis association, founded here in 1913, sponsors the Christmas seal sale each year. Funds for the organization’s health-building and lifesaving program are raised each year through the sale and is the only appeal made by the organization. Citizens * of Indianapolis Marion county will be urged to purchase and use as many seals as possible this year in order that the association's “war” against »tuberculosis may not slacken. Dr. E. O. Asher is president of ' the Marion County Tuberculosis association.

Cincinnati Art Head to Speak

JAMES S. PERKINS, Cincinnati, art director and national vice president of the American Theosophical society, = will address members of the Indianapolis chapter of the organization in the lodge rooms, 382 N. Pennsylvania st., at 8 p. m. tomorrow, "The lecture will be concerned with current issues as understood in the light of philosophy. Mr. Perkins’ subject will be “Theosophy—A Joyful Vision.” Mr. Perkins has for many years been an illustrative painter and is an active organizer of the work of the society in Ohio. For the past two years he has traveled extensively throughout the United States, visiting all the lodges

Seal Sale; Heads Named

Eli Lilly

and

of the American section.

ii Serving will begin at 5 p. m.

OPEN FARM BUREAU “PARLEY WEDNESDAY,

The 24th annual convention of the Indiana Farm Bureau, Inc. will be held Wednesday and Thursday at the Murat temple.

Larry Brandon, bureau secretary, said the usual three-day session has been cut to two days upon the recommendation of farm leaders who are too busy to spend more time away from their farm work, Mr. Brandon expiained that farmeers face a critical situation and to maintain a proper position in the war economy problems should be discussed in groups such as the coming bureau convention.

“ea

‘REAL ESTATE BROKER

DIES AT HOME HERE

Jesse E. Cline, real estate broker, died today at his home, 3635 Salem st. He was 56. A native of Clayton, Ind, Mr. Cline was the nephew of the late Fred Cline of Indianapolis. » Survivors are his wife, ‘Blanche I, and a sister, Mrs, Lynn H. Spafe ford of Indianapolis, : Services will be held at 3 p. m. Monday in the Flanner & Bue chanan mortuary, with the Rev. PF, S. C. Wicks, pastor’ emeritus of All Souls Unitarian church, officiating, Burial will be in Crown Hill.

STRAUSS SA YS:

Vol. 1—No, 18

HAT

Entire contents, copyrighted, 1942, L. Strauss & Ca. Inc.

Saturday

» Nov. 14, 1942.

As we go to press,

Eddie Rickenbacker

ELIZABETH BOWMAN, ILL 4 YEARS, IS DEAD

Indianapolis resident 70. years, died

st., - following an years. She was 72. SHe was a member of Brightwood Methodist church 50 years. husband, Henry C. Bowman, retired railroad engineer. Survivors, are three daughters, Clapp and Mrs. Blythe Cropper of Indianapolis, and Mrs. Gertrude’ Wentzel of Alton, Ill, and five: grandchildren. Funeral services Have been set tentatively for 2 p. m Monday in the Moore & Kirk funeral home, 2530 Station st, with burial in Crown Hill, wan

NAZIS TOPIC OF TALK “Nazi ~ Penetration in South America” will be discussed by Ewart: Edmund - Turner at the Rotary club ‘meeting at 12:15 p. m. Tuesday at the Claypool hotel.

ORGANIZE FIRST AIDERS

will. meet at 2 p. m. tomorrow at 630 E. Georgia st. to organize first

aiders for emergency centers.

EVENTS TODAY Football, Butler vs.

St. Joseph’s, Butler Bowl, 2 p.

Town ‘Hall, Beaker, Helen Kirkpatrick, foreign war SS orrespondent, English theater, 11 a. Physical Fitness "Cine,

Normal college, jo A E. m. to 3:3

Michigan st, 10 a

p. Abin Federation Blass + Workers union, Hotel Washington, 7 p on

Stein club, Hotel Severin, noon. U. S. Employment Service, meeting, Hotel Severin, 8:30 a. m. Employment Security division, Hotel Severin, 9.a. m.

EVENTS TOMORROW

Ice Hockey, Indianapolis’ Capitals vs. Hershey, Coliseum, fairgrounds, 8:30 p.

Townsend clubs, statewide meeting, Castle hall, 230 E. Ohio Bowling Association, meetir hy Hotel Severin, 10 a. ® igma ‘Tau Delta _ ssiority, dance, Hotel everin, 3-7 p. Cathedral high ool, operetta, ‘The Gypsy Troubadour,” 8:15 p, m.

MARRIAGE LICENSES These lists are from oficial records in ‘conn Joust house. The Times, ue responsible for e

can 0 Walter Edvard Jordan, 27. ‘of 1502% Hoyt;

rd |

Garnett Everett Smith, 28, of 510 Spring; Daisy Lee Anderson, 29, of 536 Soins. John Arthur Sullivan, 17, of 12 S. Harris; -Maisyer e Lucille Long, 16, of 525 Ss.

War) Alten” Pearce Davison, 41, Ft. Harrison; thel Amann’ Loyd, 43, Los Angeles,

Carol Florine Stonebraker, 29, of

Span Mare Edward Li ard, Clermont, Ind.; Alice Rebecca eretts. '20,° Brownsburg,

Ind. Simon Peter Gary Jr., 23, of 968 N. Roel ester;. Betty Lorean Beeson, 30, ‘520 N. Meridian. - Fiosd Sone Tp of 216 N. East; Mary E. 50, 403% Massachusetts Harold “amilion, 21, of 2526 dianapotis Ruby Bradley, 18, of 938 'W. 27th. Allen Ward Hamilton, , 52, Park Lane Apartment Hotel; Vesta’ Snyder, 47, .Riley ‘Hotel. Robert Car¥ Riensche, 23 , Tt. Monmouth, N. J.; Charlotte Marie Rothkopf, 21, of 1032 E. Ti Cigrence. nner ‘spietn, 21, of 610 W. 30th etty May Riggs, 21, of 2816: N.

oh Cohn, 22, “Ft. Harrison; Virginia Bachas, ‘18, of 1223 Uni Robert L. Stiffler, 19, ‘of .518 N. ‘Euelid; Ri Kathryn Reese, 20, of vinth a oa: Ggsnell 25, 115 S. Davidi= a Huff, et of eo | Ha

wilbar Lee Richarison, 31, of. 238 N.

1442

Noble; Rosema Ho Cheshier, . of | Chi Nob mat. 1 pe. or, 20, 1) 0

5

IN INDIANAPOLIS

Harry Morgan, a1 Stout Field, city; Mary V. Ernst, 21, of 4211 Sunset. Willie. E. Wyatt, 36, Camp Atterbury, Ind; Lois Julie” Winston, 25, of 421 Wes John Albert Bricker, 30, of 1103 8. Calhoun, Ft. Wayne, Ind.; Lucille Elizabeth Krueger, 30, of 2249 N. Illinois. Cyrus’ T. Spaulding, "43, of 7 ware; Hazel Edith Slavens, 27, of 706

'N. Alaba; william A Suddarth, 18, R. R. 341; Madelon Kershner, 17, 1432 'S. er.

Say James John Marsh Jr., 17, of 2045 N. Alab ; Geneva Fern Wilson, 20, of . Alabama. Jacob Hopkins, 23, Perry

Ft. Harrison; Ramey Heater, 24,

BIRTHS ; y Girls Walter, Maxine Toliard, at St. Francis. ' Dal Pals Delorace Jonen, at St. Francis. rt, Mildred Picard, at St. Francis. ‘Serd, ‘Pauline Stretton, at St. Jingens. : Erncst, Norma Bonnet, at Methodis Earl, "Anne" Cooper, at Methodist. bo, at Methodist. 2 Ollie; Dorothy Switzer, at Methodist. William, Flossie Hoefler, at Methodist,

Boys -

4844 John, ‘Barbars“Stout,” at St. ‘Francis,

Richard Betty Miller, at St. Vincent's. h, Alma O'Dell, at St. Vinrent’s, .- . Virginia Donovan, at Coleman, Dorothy Brooks, at Coteman. fat ‘Margaret James, at Methodist.

Mrs. Elizabeth Shaw Bowman, an

today at her home, 916 N. Denny, illness - of four |

| Her | I is a]

besides her husband, Mrs. G. D.|

Defense districts 3, 14, 16 and 17

06 N. Dela-

‘11, Box|

of 2156 Boulevard pl. |

Flash!

town is happy and excited . . . Capt.

We knew they'd find him. We haven't all the detdils as yet, butthe bomber Eddie was flying from Hawaii has been missing in the South Pacific since Cct. 21. . and his comrades were found by a Navy Catalina Flying Boat.

8 the old home-

is alive. . . .

And Lt. . Eddie

Dear Fellows—

monument won't make homesick.

again.

. the service feels, too. . .

keep on doing it. . . dotted line, fold twice. .

# THE NEWSP

neighbors, . . . 339 N. Summit st, was

story about Marine Pfe.

- Myron W. Roberts,

I | I [ |

HOPE THE SIGHT of the old home town

. Thinking a glimpse of it might look awfully good to you, whether you're in the Solomons, or Africa, or Iceland / or England, we had our artist. draw a brand new sketch.

idea for using the monument while _ reading a letter from . Lieut. Tom Lanahan, written over in England: “Got copies of last week and felt like I was .wllking down Washington st. . Its really swell. more moral uplift in a_ month-old home town paper than in anything I know.” . That’s how Tom feels about news from home, . . . And that’s how every other fellow in

it in an addressed envelope. That's all there’ is to it. Simple enough, ek?

Speniing of Contrasts— :

Wednesday about a couple of next-door One, Charles William Soltau,

years in prison for refusing to report for ‘induction into the army. . . . wouldn't fight for the United States against Germany. + + + The same day, there was a

337 N. Summit—next door—coming home on a - furlough and getting word that his son, Pfe. a marine, “had been Bild 14 action: 1 ths perfomance of iis du Sti In the setvies of kis countzy.”

used to

What’s Cookin’ in the Army— LOTS OF FOLKS will be glad to hear that Maj. Matt G. Carpenter, home town flier, has been promoted to Lieut. Col. , , . He's with the air corps in England—maybe Africa by now. . . 16 years, prior to the war,

. He was stationed at Stout field

° . .

Col. Earl

W. Sweeney is on duty in Iceland now. . . . Woody Fox, who

Lieut.

work at

the I. A. C, has

>

you fellows too family. .

. Shelby.

. We got the

the

‘What's Cookin’’ Teported

«. «+ o There's

. You home folks

—if you aren’t already clipping and mailing “What's Cookin’ ” to some soldier or. sailor or marine, we suggest you do it now—and . Just clip on the

THE Tuesday

. + And then drop _able to

medical corps. . . (R. R. 18, Box 661) is a machine gunner— somewhere in Australia. . Summers. . . school nurse, has joined the army nursing corps at Lake Sulphur Springs, W. Va. as a second lieutenant. . H. Prescott, 15 S. Bolton, has been promoted to major—at Washington.

Bang!

been visiting the

.". He's

headed for Camp

. . Among the new arrivals at

Stout field is Pvt. Alexander D’Arey, ‘the, : movie actor. ment for various units of the 1st troop carrier command. . . master sergeant now, down at Camp Sutton, NC... in the air corps at Spence field, Ga., this week, were Robert DeWitt Morgan, son of schools superintendent, Garland Pittard, of Clermont, . . . Dr. Lacy L. Shuler,

. He'll arrange entertains

. Robert E. Lorton’s &

Commissioned second lieutenants

and James

the orthopedic surgeon, has ‘at Washihgton as a major in the . Pfc. Fowler W. Summers

"... Howdy, Pfe. . Miss Mary Carr, the former

. And Capt. James

«Wea Another Japrabbit— HUNTING season opened hers

and folks hereabouts haven’t been Lear themselves think ever since,

« « +» Sounds like the battle of the Solomons,

« + « Some of the -

hunters

had stories last

Nazi. . sentenced to five

Said he the axis,

Clyde R. Roberts, Times day: Allison’s

~~ opened today. of the airplane engine factary

‘make a

little game of it. . . « They pretend ‘every rabbit and juail they see is a

Give

‘em t h e other barrel, boys. . . Here's bad news for

A bulletin

printed. on Page 1 of The Indianapolis

Armistice

“Just four months after it was 3

new Plant 5 on. Tibbs ave. It doubles the floor :