Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 12 May 1943 — Page 2

PAGE 2 THE

ERNIE PYLE CIGARET FUND

CIGARETS 2,958,580

DONORS

Previously acknowledged .....,..cvveveen U. 8S. Machine Corporation and Employees, Lebanon, Ind. Major Cigaret Companies (additional)

«= |JNION REPORTS 672.60

Bridgeport Brass Ordnance Plant Employees .. 276.00 i Link Belt, Dodge Plant Productioneers 266.25 Asks Passage of Bill ReRCA Victor Division, Radio Corp. of America .. ; 251.93 iri je i Allison Patrol Service, Plant No. 5 ........... 160.00 quiring Semi-Annual Listing of Expenses.

Kiefer-Stewart Co. Employees 151.50) Mallosil Bearing Div, P. R. Mallory & Co., Inc.. 145.75 137.10 By DANIEL M. KiDNEY Times Staff Writer

Prest-O-Lite Co. Inc, Employees (additional) . Quality Tool & Die Co. Employees and R. W. Rice, Manager 136.00] WASHINGTON, May 12. — Rep. 125.00 | Gerald Landis (R. Ind.) carried his 125.00, appeal for labor union restrictions

Schwitzer-Cummins Co. Employees Employees of Reeves Pulley Co, Columbus, Ind. 105.25 to a house labor subcommittee yes104.00 terday when he asked the members

Banquet Ice Cream and Milk Co. Employees .. Inslev Mig. Co. Employees Enployees Packard Mfg. Corporation, ‘to support his bill requiring semiHomer E. Capehart, Pres. (additional) .... 100.00 annual financial reports to the govCity Engineering Co. 100.00 ernment from the unions. Employees of Coca-Cola Bottling Co, He maintained that his bill will Indianapolis, Ind. 100,00 provide the “greater responsibility” Stokely-Van Camp, Misc. Dept, Ist & 2d Shift 80.05 needed by unions as expressed by Allison's, Dept, 351-3194, Sd Shit. ....ocvurven 68.00 Secretary of Labor Perkins in an P. BR. Mallory & Co., Inc., Dept. G., Plant No. 2 63.35 og whe SiS yo) Jonvetugh . reas 62.15 in Seattle in ober, : C. B. Cone & Son Mig. Co. Employee §1.15 “The fact that a hearing has been granted is a high tribute to the

Allison's, Dept. 498-499 ................c.cnnne ison’s Producti trol Assembly, Pro- a i Allison's Production Contx sse ability of the labor rit 58.18 recognize the fact that public opin-

duction Dept. 372, Assembly Inspection Dept. all. 3d Shift ..........00- cn ahaa ! Re est as. Inc. 2-in-1—Shinola-Jet Oil Shoe lon toward the conduct of labor Polish 55.50 unions is rapidly undergoing a . change,” Mr. Landis declared. Pipe Shop and Test 53 es! “My bill seeks to put labor unions | Beech Srove baogel”>l ha 59 00 on exactly the same basis, in so far, Polk Milk Co. Emp OYess . oii Tool CHb, “las their financial activities are cones ney A 51 po, cerned, as corporations have been on ROIS 2 tan for many years.” Engineering Metal P ’ nN Pointing out that he came to conee a) gress as a “friend of labor” from

Kipp Bros Co. isl 50.00 Anonymous (WHT) ..... UYU the coal mining town of Linton, Mr.

Gamma Alpha Chapter, Psi Tota Xi Sorority, Portland, Ind. ..... in lisbtuilinile Indianapolis Lodge No. 13, BP OK ...e0..50 Members of the Marion County Prosecutor's Office en hrc hiss ual Ellis Trucking & Terminal Transport Employees pilling & Co. and Employees ...........-- : The Hittle Machine & Tool Co. and Employees. . Allison's Machine Repair Dept, 2d Shift, Plant No. 3 .. Wi Employees of A. Burdsal Co. .... : Employees of the Gibson Co. and Capitol Motors, Inc. .. Service Dept., Marmon-He Employees of the Advance Independent Electrotype Co. .. el iii litte Allison's, Dept. 342, 3d Shift Alljson’s Plant No. 1, 3d Shift ....ccoevsnesn-ns Resident Inspector of Naval Material, Branch Office, RCA . : Lal Ziffrin Truck Lines, Inc... Employees eh Factory and Office Employees of D & A Lubricating Co. . CALs LLL AL la iiiass Monon R. R. Employees » MacArthur Shift, Holcomb & Hoke Cingan & Co., Beel Boning, Beef Express and Beef Loading Depts. hake A 2000 Aircraft Dept. Schwitzer-Cummins Co. ... Women War Workers, 4th Fl. Bldg. No. 7, Real Silk Hosiery Mills, Ime. ..... Lees Field Dept. Internal Revenue Service hans N. V. Central R. R. Yard Brakemen (Big Hump) Employees of Canary Cottage .. A Times Carriers at New Castle, Ind. .....vvieats Girls in Shipping Dept. Lane-Bryant Kingan & Co, Payroll Dept. Employees of mdiana Trust CO. ......vveevenns Allison's Fire Dept, Plant No. 3 ¥red B. Prophet Co. Employees of Cafeteria, Plant No. 5, Allison's ........ hie tl mployees of Dept. 59. Chevrolet Commercial Body Co. . LALA Kingan Athletic Employees of The wm. H. Block Co. Beauty SAJON. . o..siaaxsraane as CUhhban alls Perry Station Employees Flower Fund .. “Casey” a Fellows at T Employees of the women's Alta Vesta Club Employees of Bookwaltei-B Printing Co. ..... fioose-Wiles Biscuit CO. ........-n-oncce hil «A Good Fellowship Club” of L. Strauss « Co... Jaffe & Sons, Employees, 7 N. MNOS ..... 00 Theda B. Bedgood ei\yct & FTIONG”, Loi... ise Ralph, J. D. and Jean Urick .....scnbees beiill «Just a Parent of a Boy in Service” Mrs. H. L. Brown Chester Pyles .... Sincere Admirer of Pyle .... Walter Veregee. Carpenter's Jessie Alley ..........e.he--“Congenial Crap”... : Clyde Harris, Zionsvi 400 Clara Christy, Zionsville, Inc. 400 Bernard Clayton, Zionsville, Ind. 400 “From One Who Cares” 100 Fred Olsman : 100

fast, just as the Washington repre50.00 sentatives of most labor unions are 20.00) ow standing, against any change

20.0015, existing labor laws.

and others whose chief purpose was 50.00 t5 preak down labor unions. So long:

23.60 change existing labor laws. 23.55 + “But some two years ago I began,

93.00 labor leaders were mistaken in their| stamps.

21.10 gress and the administration, was!

20.05

17.00 hd

.. 5,008,168 $11,395.42

WATERFALL VENEER DRESSER. Fine veneer. Beautiful style plate glass $29 mirror. $39 quality PRIMA-VERA VENEER DRESSERS. Huge decorative pieces. Left over from | fine suites. Beautiful woods.

DISTINCTIVE VANITY. 6 big drawers, fine veneer throughout. Dusiproof construction. Plate glass mirror.

Many Others Too Numerous to Mention!

Grand Total for May

Seek Trucks for MILK RATIONING IN | Goodwill Drive SOME AREAS HINTED

INDIANAPOLIS FIRMS are | Peing asked by the diana Motor Truck association to donate trucks to make calls during the Goodwill Industries campaign, May 19-22. About 100 are needed and $0 far 60 have Been offered. The ODT also Is co-operating nd additional gas coupons will be given drivers who run out of gas due to work with Goodwill. There will be 100 volunteer workers helping to load and unload donations. Firms offering trucks are asked to call the association, RI-3605, or Goodwill, MA-9466.

ee — i i \

WASHINGTON, May 12 (U. P). | —Food administration officials today blamed failure of farms and dairies to meet government quotas for probable rationing of fluid milk in some areas at an ‘early date nd possible rationing of ‘evapo- | rated milk. Butter and cheese are pow rationed under the program | for meats and Tats. Food officials said that prospects have developed in which fluid milk and other products will be added to the ration list because of the i mprecedented demand for those items and unfavorable production

MRS. MABEL SCHAAB [So DIES AT HOSPITAL “How extensively it will be neci " essary to proceed with the rationMrs. Mabel (Ely) Schaab, 3802), Labi Guilford ave, died yesterday in St. or 4 ry ta Pay hy Vincent's Ng 7) os HES Stitts, dairy branch chief of the 1 As roe t of yrasaia Bolis $0 food distribution administration. a he Sonash was born in The agriculture department Fax. tte. O ey plamed smaller production per cow, ey poor pastures, shortages of hay and

Funeral services will be held ati io. ) i $ pw. tomorrow in tre Fanner & protein feeds for the shortage.

Buchanan mortuary. The Rev. IN JURED IN GUN MISHAP

Amon J. Coble, pastor of the : Brightwood Methodist church, will Wounded in the shoulder by the

lalate.

QT ——

Exactly as Niustrated All-mahiogany interiors. Extremely Yarge officiate. Burial will be at West accidental discharge of a revolver or phe a Storeof of a Side, Unity, O. he was cleaning at his home in construction. : Mrs. Schaab is survived by Wer Paragon, nd. Tester Williams, 20, : i husband, Charles L., and a son, Was brought to Red Cross head- - ; :

Charles E. Schaab, Indianapolis. |auarters at 1126 N. Meridian st, - Jast night for treatment. He was

PLAN TOUR OF JAIL [jater taken to City Hospital. The Marion County Association of — A@uaiiement

d . ! Plant Security Chiefs will meet to Your the county jail at 7:30 o'clock PIMPLES DISAPPEARED tonight. Sheriff Otto Petit will con- OVERNIGHT | E Guct the tour and lecture on the RO & fe gechanics of arrest and criminal Yes, hh ere is a hr Procedure. All chiefs of plant se- gi lio "nat and i Aer curity in this area are invited to Bight. Many veport ape had § attend. : ‘a red sore pimply Face one night Advertisement and 4 their Bh | aay Gas on Stomach = » nt oe isa Refieved ia § minstes oF | must convince you or yon get your money back. Only 50c. Join the your money back ae. | ADDY Kleerex users who are no. ad . ee, beautiful A

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LANDIS URGING Boost ‘Smo

: | The Times Ernie Pyle Cigaret Fund. “For a long period I stood stead-' cigarets for fighting Yanks overseas.

Indianapolis war plants aren't the his friend, Harold Sipe, manager only ones who'll have names pasted I sincerely on cigarets going to fighting Yanks started the collection with 20,000 50.00 1} ought that efforts to amend them through The Indianapolis Times’ cigarets or $50 as the goal. | 50.00 came largely from unfair employers Ernie Pyle Cigaret Fund. | Employees of the U. S. Machine Everyone wanted to contribute and J. Corp. in Lebanon, Ind. topped yes- some even felt slighted when not agreed to bring the number of cig-| 25.00 45 I thought that, I refused to budge térday’s list of contributors with asked. |

one inch in my refusal to help 269,040 cigarets for $672.60. | | That means 13,452 packs of cig- | have to do all the collecting. A word] As

21.80 steadfast, not-budge-an-inch atti- (at least a few of their 160 former to them. 21.60 tude. I recognized the fact that the | fellow workers now serving in the neglected when not asked to donate, | dianapolis. { public believed labor, after having|armed forces will see those stickers| “raised cain,” then went to work to| 51.50 been generously dealt with by con- and smoke those cigarets. Lee Hanna, in charge of the corunwilling to meet certain obliga- poration’s receiving department, read money just “floating in,” the orig- | government work. They also make With | inators, the company, the employees’ Winkler stokers for oil conversion.

cmt ene re

21.10 tions which were due the public.” 'about the fund in The Times.

R S216 ALL-MANOGANY 3-PIECE BEDROOM SUITE

$1 19:50

ido st

ARGUMENTS SET IN CLERKS’ CASE

‘Bain to Hear Opposing Counsel Saturday on Dismissal Motion.

Arguments on the motion to dismiss the two-year-old embezzle- | ment charges against four former | | | deputy county clerks on the ground | || that the legal deadline for trial has | passed have been set for next | Saturday before Judge W. D. Bain | of criminal court. Meanwhile, Prosecutor Blue filed | 4 motion asking that entries be made in the court order book showing that no special judge was]

seated legally to try the case for § | nearly a year after the defendants were indicted.

Blames Former Clerk

Recording of the entry is neces-| sary, Mr. Blue said, because no | records in the case had been made |by the former criminal court clerk | | through “neglect, oversight and | | omission.” The first special judge to qualify lin the case was Fae W. Patrick in|

Proud as punch, Lee Hanna, in charge of the receiving department, June, 1942. and he withdrew sevand Harold Sipe, manager of the service parts department, at the U. ora) weeks ago without calling for S. Machine Corp. in Lebanon inspect a check for $672.60 headed for | :

a trial date. That check means 269,010 This put the case under the | jurisdiction of Judge Bain who or-| of dered pleadings rushed to comhe Dletion this week to determine if

the service parts department, {the case still can be tried.

|

| Like Topsy, the fund just grew. and everyone eise was amazed. Carl Winkler, company president,

|arets to a quarter million if the em-

| Mr. Hanna and Mr. Sipe didn't ployees couldn't meet that goal. the drive ended, the total

arets with the company's name on to friends in certain departments— | reached 269,040 cigarets—more than

to realize that I was mistaken and stickers used in place of the federal |and the money from those depart-{13 times the original goal. This is The employees hope that ments was collected and presented |the largest single contribution from

The night shift felt |any industrial concern outside of In- |

The two Lebanon plants of the U. S. Machine Corp. have prime]

outdo the other plant donors. sub-contracts for|

When the total reached $415 with contracts and

WALNUT VENEER CHEST. Beautifully finished. Modlern hardware. $27 41 Easy-pull drawers. DIAMOND MATCHED VENEER CHEST. A distinctive piece. Made to sell $ 49 for $59.95. 5.-DRAWER CHEST ROBE. Cedar lined, dustproof construction. Fine veneer in prima-vera or walnut. Full-length clothes compartment. MASSIVE CHEST ROBE. Plate glass mirror. Cedar lined, 8 drawers, full-length $69 clothes compartment.

Many Other Chests, Too Numerous to Mention!

THE FINE STOCK OF THE STURGES-AULSBROOK lel, | 2-0 a Yon Kel hd ROUGHT FROM RECEIVER, RAYMOND DRESSER —AND— THE ENTIRE REMAINING STOCK OF ONE OF INDIANA'S FOREMOST MANUFACTURERS OF FINE BEDROOM FURNITURE’

PANEL VENEER BED, Heavy veneer headboard and foothoard. Made to sell for $49.

PANEL WATERFALL BED. Beautiful primavera veneer. Made to sell for $69. Carved wood. Heading board trim... . PRIMAVERA POSTER BED. A very distinctive piece. Massive posters. Beautifully decorated headboard

DIAMOND-SHAPED VENEER BED. Beautifully matched diamond-shaped walnut $49 veneer. A fine, heavy piece

HEAVY PANEL PRIMA-VERA or VENEER BED. Very beautiful style. Extremely attractive as well as sturdy. .........

Many Other Beds, Too Numerous to Mention!

$350 ALL-MANOGANY ROOM SUITE 1] Vv Woods,

BY EARL RICHERT

Both county G. O. P. factions suspect the other of elrculating the anonymous pamphlet warning of possible disaster ahead for the party here unless peace is made. But the truth is that the brochure was sent out by a group of prominent Republicans whe’ are identified with neither the Tyndall or the Bradford-Daniels-Ostrom factions,

These men, who refuse to have their identity revealed for reasons known , only to themselves, are greatly worried about the coming election and the effect that the bitter intra-party struggle might have if the election should be close. They want more than anything else to do their part to beat the New Deal. And they feel that unless the two factions are welded

of votes cannot be mustered for the Republican party in the '44 election. They show their worry in the opening statement in the pam-

phlet which is addressed to all |

Republican precinct committeemen and committeewomen. “Do you realize that Marion

| county may be the determining | factor in the state and national |

election in 1944?” they ask. “Loss of Marion county might throw the state to the Democrats.

Loss of the state might lose the |

nation in a close election such as | | eratic presidential or vice presi-

| dential | And the skeptics are reminded

| party affairs would therefore play | that at about the same Sime

the California result in 1916. “The seriousness of this situation and the importance that local

in the 1044 election, clearly places

a major responsibility upon your |

shoulders.”

Both factions are treated alike |

in the pamphlet. “Naturally,” the pamphlet states, “the question arises as to whether the Republican oragnization in Marion county, as it exists at present, is capable of the leadership required. “It has been clearly demonstrated that the Republican party organization in the county . . . is absolutely unable to weld into

| one harmonious unit, all the dif- |paraiso university.

ferent elements in Marion county that constitute true and honest republicanism. The same statement applied with equal force to the so-called ‘city hall group.” The pamphlet declares that the great responsibility of selecting capable leadership for the party is up to the precinct committee men and vice committeemen and challenges them to do something

together, the maximum number | about it.

Odds and

Ends—

Many Hoosier G. O. P. poli= ticians are planning to confer with Governor Leverett Saltonstall of Massachusetts when he is in the city this week-end. Governor Saltonstall is regarded as a prospective presidential candidate and the party leaders want to | size him up. . . . There's a lot of | talk in American Legion circles | about Roane Waring, the national commander, being a po= tential candidate for the Demo«

nomination next year.

10390 everyone was hooted who mentioned Wendell Willkie as a | presidential prospect. Mr. War- | ing was in Washington today to confer with President Roosevelt. . . . State Auditor Richard T. | James is receiving increasing | mention by regular organization Republicans as a candidate for | U. 8. senator next year. GETS STUDENT POST | ‘Ted Wambsganss, son of the Rev. land Mrs. L. Wambsganss, R. RH, | Indianapolis, has been elected treas{urer of the student council at Val

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