Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 20 May 1943 — Page 5

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who took the special navy college examination on April 2 receive final notice of their acce ance this week.

8

'CLAMOR RISES |r From Jory oR IP RIVE Gets His Wish

FT. LEE, N, J, May 20 (U. P). Churchill Fails to Quiet

80,000 YOUNG MEN FACE CALL TO NAVY

WASHINGTON, May 20 (U. P.) .— Nearly 80,000 young men will be called to active duty with the navy and assigned to study under the navy college training program on, July 1. About one-fifth of this number will be drawn from enlisted person-, nel of the navy, marine corps and coast guard and from civilian youth, The remaining four-fifths will be

men already in colleges and in an active reserve status. Civilians

MURDER CHARGE FOR SOCIALITE

Court Admits Deathbed Statement in Case of

“Dishpan Hands.”

ANNAPOLIS, Md. May 20 (U. P.). =—The state summons additional witnesses into the century old Anne Arundel county court house today in an attempt to prove that Helen Eileen Randle, 31-year-old wife of the socialite horseman Ulmo 8S.

Randle, III, murdered a high school | boy who once said she had “dishpan | Late this afternoon, following the

hands.” | a. council meeting, Churchill will meet | HITS H 0BBS 8 ILL

with representatives of the British VanNuys Promises UAW a

dominion governments and his own {staff of military, naval and air exHearing by Senate Committee.

| perts. Meanwhile, certain congressmen reiterated demands for immediate | Senator A. B. Chandler (D. Ky.), By DANIEL M. KIDNEY long a contender that Japan and] Times Staff Writer not Germany is enemy No. 1, turned | WASHINGTON, May 20—Sen-

Dr. Scholl’s Zino-pads instantly stop nagging shoe friction; lift pain. ful pressure. Cost buta

Southern California camp. racks floor and scraped d ill and President Roosevelt meet to- | Eh trifle. Sold everywhere.

—Cpl. George Rosson, who vearned “to feel the good old New Jersey soil under my feet,” got his wish—without leaving his Critics; Meets Today Charles Abbot, who answered : re 3 the plea by sending Rosson a box With Pacific Council, of New Jersey dirt, received this WASHINGTON, May 20 (U. P| reply from the corporal: —Prime Minister Winston Church-| x ‘NeW the dirt on the bar- | scraped my bare feet in it. Boy, day with the Pacific war council,| did the other fellows from the presumably to discuss new offen-| East help me out? They sure did. sive strategy for the Far East which| Thanks a million. they have been developing in more | than a week of White House econ-| ferences. | IN

Mrs. Randle heard herself accused of first degree murder vesterday. | She paid scant attention to the pro-| ceedings. Confronting her was the state- | ment taken from 17-year-old Allen | Willey, before his death in emer-| gency hospital. Chief Judge Ridgely | P. Melvin ruled that the statement to his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Addisotn H. Willey, and his elder brother, Douglas, was admissible evidence,

Randles Quarreled The parents and brother testified that the musically talented youth told them the fatal shooting on Jan. 30, 1942, had been preceded by a quarrel between the Randles in which Mrs. Randle had criticized

action against Japan, refusing to be| {Official photo from Bunker Hill naval air station) Business in Peru is being done gondola-style this week. This picture was taken looking south on Broadway, at the edge of the Peru business district. Churchill’s argument for concerted ator Frederick VanNuys (D. Ind.)

satisfied with Churchill's promise that Britain will fight with the 4000 WALK OUT AT | OPA Reunites |JGOSLAV UNREST Ic: . Vill yoTton Seatnst Sop ines Sal Burope | announced today that he had as {into an argument for increased at-| » CHRYSLER PLANTS Hoosier I age HARRIES GERMANS | sured Indiana members of the

United States unti)] Japan's cities are reduced to ashes. {tention to the Pacific, inasmuch as ATWOOD, Ind., May 20 (U. P.). DETROIT, May 20 (U. P.).—Ap- LONDON, May 20 (U. P..—A knock out either Great Britain or

| "Germany is not now in position to|ynited Automobile Workers (C.1.0.)

=The OBA tugey seshored peace {a hearing on the Hobbs bill which

and good will to the village of ! the Soviet union.”

Jugoslav spokesman said today the;

her husband and made a derogatory remark about the character of Mrs. Willey, his mother. The youth reportedly told Mrs. Randle: “You don’t have a such a wonderful reputation yourself. I've got the facts and figures on you.”

, Husband Silent

Mrs. Randle left the Randle Bay Ridge mansion drawing room, Willey was quoted as saying, returned with a rifie and demanded an apology. Despite his apology, Willey reportedly said, Mrs. Randle declared, “I'm going to kill you,” fired point blank at him, reloaded the gun and, crying “here's one for you,

proximately 4000 emplovees of the Chrysler Corp. Jefferson and Kercheval plants walked out today. The strike forced closing of the plants which make parts for “virtually every product we make,” a company spokesman said. Ed Carey, president of Chrysler local 7. U. M. W.-C. I. O, said he had advised the war labor board that bargaining machinery at the two plants has “completely broken down.” “Our contract expired last

November,” he said, “and since that time the union has gone virtually

Atwood, population 265. Atwood boasts two grocery stores, one on each side of Main st., better known as U. 8. highway 30. Atwood also boasted two separate and distinct price schedules, one for each side of Main st., and one higher than the other. Housewives gravitated to the store with the lower ceilings across the street and the red ink began to flow. ' Frank Sibley, South Bend OPA

director, said it was an oversight, |

and placed the whole town under one ceiling.

exiled government had received re-| liable reports that German and Bulgarian soldiers had burned 15 villages in eastern Serbia and executed 167 Serbs in a new cam-| paign against anti-axis activity. Bulgarian occupation forces took | 12000 hostages in the Jazlanica dis- |

i

Congressmen generally approved Churchill's pledge to fight shoulder to shoulder with the United States against Japan and felt that he made clear that there has been no change in the over-all allieg plans to crush Germany first. Some were disappointed, however.

CITES ILLEGAL OPERATIONS

[passed the house and now is pendjing in the senate judiciary committee of which he is chairman, Twenty-three U. A. W. union [leaders from the state conferred |with the senator and some of the | Indiana congressmen for two hours yesterday. Today they

{delegations from Illinois, Wiscon-

reported |; the results at a conference of other |:

{sin, Minnesota and Iowa at national |:

trict, the spokesman said, and 400] NEW YORK, May 20 (U. P.).— headquarters of the Congress o ‘hostages were shot at Belgrade in Ijjegal operations among women war Industrial Organizations here.

| reprisal for the killing of two Ger- | plant workers are increasing be- | Arnold

man soldiers. i Abcut 250 followers of Gen. Draja! | Mikhailovitch were

cause of the policy of dismissing women known to be pregnant, Dr.

reported Claude C. Pierce, medical director argued

Atwood, Indianapolis, | (U. A. W. head in Indiana, had charge of the delegation.

against passage of the

rounded up and shot in Belgrade of the Planned Parenthood Feder-| Hobbs anti-racketeering bill, Con-

They |;

within two weeks. ation of America, said today.

[nally-Smith bill, aimed at strikes [in war industries and Ruml pay-as-you-go tax plan.

Approve Subsidies

t00,” shot her husband. unrecognized by the corporation.” He hopes every one is happy.

v

They were for subsidies to hold (down price increases and passage of the anti-poll tax bill. Congressmen attending the con- | ference included Reps. George W.! Gillie, Forest A. Harness, Charles! M. La Follette and Raymond 8S. Springer, all Republican. The latter defended the Hobbs bill which came from the house judiciary committee of which he is a member. Mr. Harness took up the cudgels for the Connally-Smith measure which was reported from the military affairs committee of which he also is a member. Since Mr. La Follete had voted against all the measures to which the delegation was opposed he came |§ a sort of congressional spokesman for them at the meeting.

23 In Delegation

Senator VanNuys assured them that he would do all in his power to see that they get a fair hearing. In addition to Mr. Atwood were the following: L. O Asman, Indianapolis; W. F. Harrington, Robert Bunch, B. F. Moore and Lyle Hughes, South Bend; S. B. Hartman and C. R. Shrock, Ft. Wayne; Herman Welch, Raymond R. Daffron, Thomas Callender and Jesse Payne, Anderson; Walter Claspell, Muncie; Charles Oxby and Walter |} Hayden, Evansville; C. Jones and Howard S. Wood, Connersville; Homer Rose and Hester New, New Castle; Kenneth Hoober, Robert Gray and Warren Fosnight, Hagerstown, and R. Nelson, Elkhart.

DAVIES WILL MEET MOLOTOV TODAY

MOSCOW, May 20 (U. P).~— Joseph E. Davies, representing President Roosevelt on a mission to the Kremlin, will be guest of honor at a reception at the U. S. embassy residence tonight. Davies, former American ambassador to Russia, was scheduled to present his credentials to Foreign Commissar V. M. Molotov dur- |; ing the day and to arrange for a meeting with Josef Stalin at which he will hand a sealed letter from the president to the Russian premier, Davies told the Soviet press that he hoped to visit Russia again after the war to “acquaint myself with the great successes and progress I am certain awaits «you in {hc future.”

JEALOUSY CAUSES SUICIDE OF HUSBAND

NEW CASTLE, Ind, May 20 (U. P.).—Henry County Coroner Ralph Niblock said today Frank De Hart, 42, killed himself late yesterday after an altercation with a roomer, apparently over De Hart's jealousy of him. Before shooting himself, Niblock said, De Hart wounded the roomer, William Frost, and shot at his wife. De Hart then barricaded himself in an upstairs room and fired three shots at police when they attempted to break down the door.

CAN'T KEEP GRANDMA IN HER CHAIR

She’s as Lively as a Youngster Now her Backache is better Many sufferers relieve backache quickly, once Shey. discover that the real cause of their trouble may be tired kidneys. The kidneys ars Nature's chief way of tak= ing the excess acids and waste out of the Dood ¢ They help most people pass about 3 When disorder of kidney funecti poisonous matter to remain in your b ods It

and , P! eyes, iness. Frequent or scanty Phsmages with smarting and burning somethere is something wrong your een or bladder, i Don’t wait! Ask your d for Doan's used successfully by liens for Tn rh

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