Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 23 July 1943 — Page 22

"PAGE 22

SENATORS PLAN TOUR OF FRONTS.

Group to Gather Facts or Outline of Post-War Period.

WASHINGTON, July 23 (U. P.. =Chairman Richard B. Russell (D. Ga), of a five-senator group which will day that the main purpose of the! trip was to gather information which will help the senate in postwar planning. Russell's personal aim, he admitted, was to further his support of a world organization—league of nations, or any similar agency— which he now is convinced would help prevent future wars. He characterized himself as a convert to the world family idea. pointing out that he formerly was an isolationist. “We're going to all major war theaters,” he said. “to look into the spending our people abroad are doing, to inspect our installations, to get some idea of the stocks of materials we have and are likely to have abroad when this war ends. And were going to visit our men and women to find out what they're thinking—how they're getting along. | “And, what 1st as important, were going how the other fellow lives: what thinking. if we can, and what he wants to see come out of this war.” Going with Russel are Senators A. B. Chandier (D. Ky.); Ralph O Brewster (R. Me.); James M. Mead (D. N. Y.); and Henry Cabot Lodge, Jr. (R. Mass.).

DON'T SELL Your DIAMONDS

They Are Your Best Security for Years to Come

WE WILL LOAN YOU AS MUCH AS THE CASH MARKET PRICES

Righest Valuations — Cash Immediately

LINCOLN STATE PAWNERS abinbbhib ld Ba

tour war theaters disclosed to-

captured at Pearl Harbor.

War bond sales are booming as Indianapolis citizens await their chance to inspect the suicide

anxiously

Japanese two-man submarine which will be here Friday, July 30, on the south side of Monument circle. The American Womans Veluntary Services, Indianapolis ter, sponsors of the display, set a goal of $250,900 of war bonds to be sola to admit buyers to the display. Special tickets for servicemen will be sued at the Circle booth for in war stamps, and children’s tickets 25-cent war stamp sale. James F. Frenzel, manazer of the war finance com-

has

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US WORD IS

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Crowds such as this one will peer into the inter ior of the two-man Jap suicide submarine that will be displaved on the south side of the Monument circle on Friday, be seen clearly and dummy figures of the Jap crew are dressed in the uniforms worn when the ship was

July

that tickets be given for bonds ispavroil savings, but who wants to see the

mittee, said today will not sued on

| everybody

Waiting—

| | Not for Nellie Now, But Records for Camps Overseas.

Wait til the sun shines, Nellie, { When the clouds go drifting by. We will be happy, Nellie, Don’t vou sigh: Down lover's lane we'll wander

Sweetheart, you and I:

Wait ’til the sun shines, Nellie, Bye and bye.

BACK IN THE good old days the boys may have been singing Wait Till the Sun Shines, Nellie,” but today they are waiting for the people back home to send them records. Material for records is needed | and can be obtained by reprocess- | ing scratched, broken or discarded ones. To entertain our boys on the fighting fronts, the 11th district of the American legion is seeking to collect 100.000 of these records, old or new, in Marion county. Just take your records to the nearest fire station or branch library and entertain the boys over there.

WIFE IS ACQUITTED IN ‘DUSTER’ DEATH

| MONTGOMERY, Ala. July 23 (U.!| P.) —Mrs. Kathryn Holloway, 41, today was free of murder charges in| connection with the slaying of her husband, David A. Holloway, whom | she was accused of beating to death with the handle of a feather duster. A Montgomery county circuit! court jury deliberated but two hours before turning in a verdict of * ‘not | guilty” last night. Mrs. Holloway had admitted beating her husband, | a prominent insurance man, for several hours the early morning of | July 13, but denied causing his| death, She showed little emotion as the Jury returned its verdict, nor had|

ment measures,

| cific

30. The sub’s working parts can

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

Jap Suicide Sub on Circle July 30

2a WE FRipAY JULY 23, 1943

WIFE FREED IN MATE'S DEATH

Spectators Cheer Acquittal Of Muncie Mother of 10 Children.

MUNCIE. Ind. July 23 (U. P.).— A Delaware county circuit court jury deliberated for seven minutes yesterday and then returned a ‘not guilty” verdict in favor of Mrs. Clara Edwards, 43, mother of 10 children, who said she had shot her husband with “God's approval.” The courtroom, crowded with women spectators, loudly applauded the verdict. Mrs. Edwards had testified earlier today that she shot her husband, Moyne, 44, on April 2, as he lay in a drunken stupor because he had threatened to kill her and the children. Daughter Faints

Mrs. Jean Acton, blond and pretty daughter of the defendant, fainted | for the third time during the trial] after the verdict was read, while] the other nine children of Mrs. Ed-| wards crowded around her in almost hysterical joy. The other five daughters

wept sons

sub must buy an extra bond. The | submarine has averaged $22,000 | in sales for every hour it has | been on exhibit, he said.

INLOS ANGELES

One Day Walkout Ends but Another Strike Is Due Sunday.

LOS ANGELES. July 23 (U. P.). —Only direct intervention by Pres- |

ident Roosevelt can prevent a strike |

set for 2 a. m. Sunday by one of Los Angeles area’s two principal trans- | portation lines, Mayor Fletcher Bowron reported today. Street car and bus service on the

other system was returning to nor- |

mal after a 24-hour work stoppage. Confronted with a regional war

labor board order to return to their |

jobs immediately or employees of the

affiliated Los Angeles Railway and

| Los Angeles Motor Coach companies

ended their token one-day work stoppage at 3 a. m. Sufficient motormen, conductors jand bus drivers from among the |

13200 who walked out reported to

{barns and yards to get early sched-

‘ules operating for the 1,000,000 daily

jriders in Los Angeles and its in-|

‘dustrial suburbs, the nation’s war-

| plane production center

Serves Ship Workers Thousands of motorists volunteered to transport stranded war | workers yesterday, picking them up on street corners and driving them to the plants. More than 2600 trolley motor coach operators of the PaElectric Railyway System | scheduled their strike Sunday to {protest the ruling of Economic Stabilization Director Fred M. Vinson slashing wage increases from | the 13 cents an hour agreed to by {employers and a railway emergency | {board to 3 cents. The walkout, called after a 1723 | to 49 vote of approval, would para- | lyze both passenger and freight | cperations. The Pacific Electric] serves 400.000 daily riders in the | city and on interurban routes to 55

— outcome of the trial.

SEEK F.D.R. AID

face govern- |

and!

with happiness, and the four awkwardly tried to conceal | elation. Later each member of the jury | | filed past Mrs. Edwards, shook her | hand, and congratulated her on the’

their

Edwards did not deny that 10 chilaction

Mrs. | she shot the father of her dren, but claimed that her was “God's way.’ Testifying in her own behalf yes- | Wa, the frail housewife told the | ll-male jury that on the night of | (ne shooting, Edwards had come

home in a drunken rage and had (of Canadian birth. Among these | hall,

threatened again to kill them all. “I Was in Fear”

he would have done it she said. “I was in my own and my

“I, knew | that night.” ‘great fear for children’s lives.” | She said she remembered taking a drink of whisky, crawling to a wardrobe and getting a shotgun and some shells. She didn't remember the actual shooting. | Prosecutor Ralph Rector had asked the maximum penalty for second-degree murder—Ilife impris|onment. He declared that Mrs. Ed{wards had had ample opportunity {for lawful recourse from ill-treat-iment. She could have divorced her Hishand, or had him arrested, RecIt r said. | Mrs. Edwards had no comment immediately after the verdict was (read. She broke into tears as the {words “not guilty” were pronounced, land cried steadily for many minutes |afterwards. Then she said that she was going back home and resume her normal life.

SOMES NAMED NAA INDIANA GOUNGILOR

The Rev. Joseph Henry Vanderburgh Somes, pastor of the Church ‘of Our Lord Jesus Christ, King, has been elected national councilor of the state of Indiana by the board (of directors of the National Aero|nautic association. The Rev, Mr. Somes has long {been active in aviation circles. He |is a captain, liaison officer, of the (Indiana wing of the civil air patrol, president of the Indiana Society of {the Sons of the American Revolution and chairman of the Indiana national defense council. He was elected to membership in

huge firing power of its Flying Fortresses and Thunderbolt fighters at an air station in England. Here are T. Sgt. Painsville, O Ind, ‘Waist gurmer Just before they Started their demonstration,

500 IN U. S. ARMY

WASHINGTON, July 23 (U. P.) - Five hundred nationals of 43 coun- jargest contingent, tries army recent mass ceremony in North Af|rica, | today. | wear their new country.

Hoosier Shows Them How BALL STATE ASKED TO TRAIN FOR ARMY

| Ball State Teachers’ college of | Muncie was among 40 colleges and { universities invited to join the army | specialized training program, bringling the total of collegiate institu- | tions participating to 190, the war | department, announced today. Commanding officers of service | commands have been authorized to

[negotiate contracts expanding some existing units and establishing new [units at other schools. Most new units are being activated this month for the term opening Aug. 9. The start of the August term will fadd upward of 20,000 to the 60,000 soldiers now in the ASTP. Approximately 17,000 additional soldiers are now at specialized training and | reassignment units,

for JEWELRY it's Tavel )

® We Close Saturday at | P. M.

The American 8th air force in Britain recently demonstrated the

R. A. Myllykoski, , in the ball turrget and S. Sgt. J. A. Jessup, Union City, |

| were Lt. Mary Jean Craig of the | ‘army nurse corps, only woman in BECOME CITIZENS the group. were the next with Germany,|

MASONIC RINGS Mexico, Poland, Great Britain, Aus- S$ 500 | tria, Russia and Czechoslovakia fol- |

to $300.00 Massive Yellow Gold Mountings—Also Emblem Rings for All Other Lodges. TERMS—§1.25 per WEEK!

EMBLEM BUTTONS §${.00

% DIAMOND

| Italian nations

serving with the American! became U. S. citizens in a the war department revealed lowing. Some of the group already decorations won fighting for

p—

REBEKAHS MEET TUESDAY

Temple Rebekah lodge 591 will | The majority of new citizens were meet at 8 p, m. Tuesday at Castle |

for All Lodges . . . up

Jf Ry Wik

4u MARKET 1

Cen

A TWO-DAY HOLIDAY FROM SATURDAY NOON UNTIL MONDAY NOON

1 CLOSES

SATURDAYS AT 1 P. M.

| nearby communities and to the the N. A. A. in 1036 upon the mo- | California shipbuilding yards at tion of Capt. Eddie Rickenbacker. | Terminal island, the nation’s larg- The association is the representaest builders of Liberty freighters. tive of the U. S. in the Federation The strike would halt service on|aeronautique Internationale. Its (the harbor belt line, conducted | yg of directors is made up of |

LISTEN TO

“MEMORY TIME”

Station WiBe

Tues. & Thurs,

It’s easy to pay my budget way —by week or month as you are paid. Only ONE account for ALL the family covering plates, bridgework, fillings, extractions

and X-Rays, ROOM 301—3rd Floor

she shown any during the trial} which began Wednesday afternoon. | The state contended that other] ‘weapons than the blood-spattered! dusger had been used, but could not

Suu)

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FOR MOMENTS LIKE THIS

ADMIRAL, CAPTAINS | GET NAVY CROSSES

WASHINGTON, July 23 (U. P) — Rear Admiral Mahlon 8S. Tisdale and two naval captains whose | cruisers defeated Japanese forces at| { the battle of Lunga point have been awarded navy crosses by Secretary lof Navy Knox. Capt. Frank L. Lowe and Capt. Clifford H. Roper were decorated for “fighting their ships with skill and determination.” Tisdale's wife lives at Annapolis, Md. and Lowe's wife lives in Washington. Roper’s home is Berkeley, Cal.

CANNERS GET MORE SUGAR

WASHINGTON, July 23 (U. P.). | —The office of price administration today authorized an increase in the |

= | amount of sugar that commercial]

FOX DELUXE Always up to par!

Something to look forward to at the nineteenth hole . . . good old Fox De Luxe! Treat yourself to its mellow goodness and you'll understand why Fox De Luxe is the favorite of millions. Try it today!

Fox DeLuze Brwg Co. of Ind, Inc, Marion

FOX DE LUXE BEER

canners may use in packing the] i remainder of the 1943 food crop.| | The extra allowance will permit the jcanner to use 100 per cent instead! jof only 90 per cent of the amount of sugar used in 1941.

jointly by the P. E, Southern Facific and Union Pacific and handling 35 per cent of the freight in war-busy Los Angeles-Long Beach harbor, a port of embarkation for {convoys of troops and munitions to | the South Pacific.

One Patton Lost— It Wasn't a Fight

ABOARD U. 8S. INVASION FORCE FLAGSHIP, North Africa Port, July 19.—(Delayed)— (U. P.).—The admiral may have nicked the general for a bottle of whisky. Before pulling out of North Africa for Sicily, Lt. Gen. George S. Patton Jr, bet the admiral of this invasion fleet it would take eight days to unload United

| manufacturers, {and aviation magazine publishers.

‘CONSTRUCTION MEN

airline

NEEDED IN ALASKA

Army engineers are seeking experienced construction men between the ages of 18 and 55 to work on government air bases and canton-

Alaska. Richard T. Irby of the Seattle district office of the U. S. engineers will interview candidates today

the war manpower commission, U.

ers, motive mechanics, heavy duty truck

States transports on southern Sicily. While all reports from ships weren't available, those at several points averaged far less than eight days getting their cargoes of men and supplies on shore. Patton had feared sand bars— not enemy resistance.

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Between North and Walnut Sts.

OLF

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Phone RI-0069

Buy

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Pre-shrunk Yr Shirts _

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Ladies Bathing

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Men's Summer “Rivercrest.” cools” and Gabardines. Grays, tans and blues,

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'SEABEE CRUISER DUE

ment projects in the territory of |=

through next Friday in the office of |=

S. employment service, 148 E. Mar- | 4 ket st. 8 Those critically needed are body |= and fender mechanics, general help.) handymen, heavy duty auto-|=

truck me- : | Shanies and we and welders. | E |8

executives | &

TO DOCK HERE AUG. 2

Indianapolis citizens will be on hand to witness the docking of the Seabee cruiser caravan at 8 a. m.|

| Aug. 2 on the Circle as a part of the

city's effort to aid in procuring 100,000 Seabees throughout the country before the first of the year. Lt. W. E. Timberman, who is in | charge of the mobile unit com-

posed of truck and trailer, will di- | =

rect the docking. Recruiters will be on board to in- |

terview or answer questions of ap- | =

= i | =} 3 i | Sh

3

plicants. Visiting hours for the public to inspect the cruiser will be from 8 a. m. to 10 p. m. |

GIRAUD IN AFRICA

ALGIERS, July 23 (U. P.).—Gen.! Henri Honore Giraud, French North |S African leader and co-president of | the French committee for national | liberation, has reached North Africa | after a trip to the United States and | England and is expected in Algiers this afternoon, it was announced | today.

PENSION GROUP TO MEET Indiana old-age pension group 11 will meet at 8 p. m. Monday at ihe 0. Hamilton ave and |

72% SENSATION

A Lucky Buy—The Last for the Duration

GENUINE SPRING FILLED SEAT

Tilt-Back Chair and Ottoman

A $69.50 Value While 100 Last

ts ah GR i

Tilts to Any Comfortable Angle for Reading, Resting or Dozing

We were extremely fortunate in obtaining this special shipment of deluxe built Tik-Back Chairs ith SPRING FILLED CUSHIONS and don’t expect to get any more of this fine pre-war construction after these are gone. The chairs and matchin Ottomans are richly upholstered in your choice of Velour or Tapestry. Frames are of solid walnut. The price is a real sensation. Here is a sale that really warrants QUICK ACTION.

TERMS °" $125 WEEK!

The Home of Better Furniture for Less

83 MN. Mercian $t.—Open to 6 P. M.—Sat. and Mon. 8 P. M. OLOSED ALL DAY SUNDAY