Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 7 May 1943 — Page 25

4

LEGION URGES

+ thusiasm in drafting the post-war

FR

7

U. §. TAKE LEAD

Should Set Up Machinery For Post-War Study, Committee Says.

“The United States should assert ;

its leadership in setting up machinery

REN

Body Sou sht

to handle the post-war|: problem of the world,” the American °

Legion national executive committee 3 \

decided this morning in accepting & proposal of the national foreign relations committee, Members voted to discuss the Ball, Burton, Hatch and Hill resolution now in United States senate at the national convention next fall. The national executive committee @lso adopted a proposal that “wise and careful study” must be given to the post-war question “to keep the American people from being lulled into a false notion that victory is close at hand since over en-

program might take them oblivious to the grave problems of global war confronting this and other allied eountries.”

Approves F. D. R. Visit

The committee expressed confidence in the foreign policy of the national administration, approved the recent visit of the president to Mexico and ‘voted that all decisions “concerning military aid to our allies should be left entirely to our military leaders.” “Compulsory arbitration as a means of preventing strikes in defense industries” is to be submitted by the national defense committee in resolutions to be presented today.

NAZI U-BOAT BOASTS COVER-UP FAILURES

By UNITED PRESS Germany's threatened “new tactic’ in U-boat warfare appeared today to be a cover-up for failures to gcore big successes in April and May. A Transocean (German) news agency communique broadcast by Radio Berlin said that a “pause which has now come to an end has given an opportunity for new formation and regrouping of German submarines.” The dispatch said that March ginkings—admitted by the allies to be high—could be credited to the use of sub flotillas or “wolf packs.”

AWAIT SUGAR RULES

Reports that new regulations are now in effect governing allotments of sugar for canning and preserves were discounted today by Indiana OPA officials. It is the understanding of Indiana OPA officials that the new sugar regulations are now being drafted and will probably be announced within a few days. TY

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Don Fuller

YOUTH DROWNS IN RESERVOIR

Don Fuller, 18, Warren Central Athlete Is Victim; Three Pals Safe.

State police and Hamilton county deputy sheriffs are dragging the Oaklandon reservoir today in an attempt to recover the body of Don Fuller, 18-year-old Warren Central

high school athlete who was drowned there yesterday atternoon. Young Fuller, the son of Mr. and Mrs. George W. Fuller, 3027 N. Capitol ave, was riding in a rowboat with three companions when the strong wind and high waves capsized the boat. The other three boys reached shore safely. Police were handicapped in their efforts to recover the Fuller boy's body because the boats available were too small to stay upright on the water where the waves frequently reach heights of four feet. However, young Fuller's father said that a larger boat was being brought from South Bend today. The Fuller boy's parents went to the scene of the drowning and stood by while police dragged the reservoir. Young Fuller's companions were James V. Garinger Jr. 17, of 2206 N. Arlington ave.; Norman Jeffers, 19, of 3517 N. Grande ave. and Floyd E. Askren, 18, of 6500 E. 16th st. All are pupils at Warren Central.

Fought Off Rescue

The four boys had taken their nine-foot boat to the reservoir and were fishing more than 100 yards from shore when it overturneg. Young Fuller and Garinger, both good swimmers, began to swim to shore while the other two boys clung to the side of the boat. After Fuller swam a short distance, his friends said he appeared to be having trouble battling the high waves, and he called to young Garinger for help. The Garinger boy swam to the Fuller youth and attempted to help him, but young Fuller evidently became panic-stricken and fought off the Garinger boy. Young Fuller went down seven times. Garinger swam the rest of the way to shore.

Football, Track Star

Meanwhile, the other two boys, kicked with their feet and moved the boat close enough to shore for young Garinger to pull them to safety with a pole. The Fuller youth would have been graduated from high school in two weeks. He was born here and attended School 70. At Warren Central he was a football and track star. He was a member of the Third Church of Christ, Scientist. Besides the parents, he is survived by a sister, Mrs. Irene White= sides of Indianapolis, and a brother, Pvt. George E. Fuller, stationed with

the army air force at Amarillo, Tex.

NEW FIGHT SEEN ON TRADE PACTS

GOP Denies That Renewal Vote Will Be a Test of

Post-War Policy.

By MARSHALL McNEIL Times Special Writer

WASHINGTON, M a vy T7—A|

solemn appeal for large and bipartisan support for the bill extending the reciprocal trade agreements act, to prove to the world

that we will co-operate with our| alliees after the war. is being made to the house by the Democratic majority of the ways and means committee. This unique plea, now in the committee’s report, will reach the floor, next week, when debate on the, measure begins. The rules committee yesterday gave the measure the green light. The house, say the ways and | means Democrats, will be providing material for Berlin's radio propaganda if it fails to give strong support to the extension bill.

G. 0. P. Rejects Idea

But Republican members of the | committee reject the idea that the

| |

fight over the bill is a test of our|

{when the flight

Pl]

(TIF A

Sole Survivor

REYRJAVIK, Iceland, May 6 (U.

P.) —(Delayed)—The sole survivor|.

of the crash of a four-engined Liberator in which Lt. Gen. Frank M. Andrews, Bishop Adna Wright Leonard and 12 others died told his story today.

S. Sgt. George A. Eisel of Co-| |

lumbus, O., was pinned in the wreckage for 26 hours, singed by the fire that started the instant the bomber hit and came near to freezing before aid arrived. A heavy

rain put out the fire or he would] :

have burned to death.

Andrews, who was commander of | :

United States forces in the European theater, was at the controls started but the regular pilot took over while the plane was over the ocean, Eisel Said.

Lost Radio Beam

The plane lost the radio beam Monday afternoon but, after an hour of blind flying, located the airport on Iceland at about 4:15 p. m. The pilot could not set her down because of the weather. Visibility was 40 feet. Soon afterward it smashed into a rocky hillside. “After the crash I never heard a single sound from the others and presumed that all were instantly, killed,” Bisel said. “I was in the tail turret and was

of Ice Singed by Fire,

es

nd Plane Nearly

on

S. Sgt. George Eisel

alive but only my eyelashes were singed. “One of my feet was pinned fast and I couldn't move it. The bleeding and also the circulation was stopped by it. I thought I would be dead when the rescue party arrived.” It took an hour to get Eisel loose from the wreckage and then he had

post-war foreign policy, saying at- thrown forward by the crash, The to be carried more than a mile to

tempts to make it that are “un- plane caught fire instantly but a an ambulance.

| fortunate,” “imprudent,” and “pre- | sumptuous.” | | The Democrats, with one excep- | tion— Rep. Milton West of Texas—

{succeeded in getting the extension hill reported favorably and with a

by a Republican.

measure ‘from the house member= ship as a whole, they say: “Pirst: It is desirable to continue

instrument of international co- | operation, in the interest of unity in the war effort, of a secure peace thereafter, and of American prosperity. Seek Bi-Partisan Vote

the vote as large and as bi-partisan as possible, in order that our allies and the citizens of the U. S. may be assured that international cooperation in post-war reconstruction is not a party tnatter. “hira: It is desirable that the extension be in the form and for the term that has formerly been used, in order that no unnecessary doubts may he created.” Demcerats hope that consideration of the bill next week will not become one of those “narrow and sterile tariff debates of the past” but Republican opposition indicates it might. Offer Amendments

Republicans scoff at the idea, first advanced by Secretary of State Cordell Hull, who fathered this whioe program of reciprocal trade agreements, that extension is a test of future American foreign policy. “It is unfortunate,” they contend in their minority report, “because, to make the extension resolution a test case of future American foreign policy is to exaggerate its importance in relation to the larger questions of world reconstruction and security upon which the congress eventually will have to pass —Myr. Hull to the contrary notwithstanding.” Republicans offer six amendments to the extension bill, perhaps the most important of which is one proposing that congress have the right to pass upon reciproeal trade agree-= ments within 90 days after they are submitted by the president.

SOLDIER DIES IN FALL

COLUMBUS, O, May 7 (U.P) = Pvt. William Tobin, 22, of Syracuse, N. Y., member of the 117th flight squadron at Lockboutne air base, fell to his death today from a fourth floor hotel room during a pillow fieht with another soldier.

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Crash, Froze to Death

Bisel arrived in England last winter. He had crashed once be= fore, having been shot down during a mission against Tunis, Sousse and Sfax in Tunisia. Three of his comrades were killed and Eisel also was hurt that time. He received a Purple Heart award. He is credited with shooting down two planes, putting seven out of action and damaging 12. He has been in raids on Germany, Italy and France. Other decorations he has received include an air medal, the distinguished flying eross and three oak leaf clusters. None of the men who started on the flight to Iceland ever had been there. They learned their destination only the night before their last trip began.

POLES WERE SPIES, RUSS OFFICIAL SAYS

MOSCOW, May 7 (U. P| Deputy Foreign Commissar Andrei, J. Vishinsky charged today that Polish diplomats and high-ranking | army officers had been guilty of | espionage against the Soviet Union. Many have been tried and pun-| ished or expelled from Russia, Vis- | hinsky told Anglo-American newspaper correspondents. Among those was Gen. Romuald Wolikowski, former head of the Polish military mission to Russia and one who played an “important part in . . .

espionage work in the U. S. 8. R.” |

CARPENTER, 71, KILLED BY CAR

Death of Samuel Armstrong Brings County's Traffic | Toll to 37. |

Samuel Armstrong, 71-year-old! retired moulder and carpenter, died | last night in Long hospital from | injuries received when he was struck | by. a car in the 4400 block on W.| Washington st, Mr. Armstrong was struck by a. ear driven by Sgt. Major C. Goede, a | member of the first troop carrier command, Stout field. Early today, Otto Smith, 73, of 703 Massachusetts ave., was seriously injured when struck by a car at!

3

North st. and Massachusetts The driver of the car was Wa Sparks, 65620 Cornell ave.

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