Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 23 July 1943 — Page 5
* = Bn
FRIDAY, JULY 23, 1943
SEES NO NEED T0 SPARE ROME
Catholic Weekly Decries! 4 Distinction in Case of Holy City.
NEW YORK, July 23 (U.P).~— The Commonweal, Catholic weekly, believes that a Catholic “to precisely the extent his faith is strong and informed” will make no distinction | between the bombing of Rome and’ that of the Ruhr and England. In an editorial prepared for its! Xt issue, the publication, edited Catholic laymen, said that “there| is something disturbing in the fact! that the announcements which have accompanied the bombing of Rome have so distinguished Rome from all other cities.” | “The announcements, and the | president's message to the pope,” the editorial said, “Have a lock of! saying we are going to he careful’ this time, we are going to take tre-| mendous technical precautions about | Rome because we realize what Cath-! os think about Rome. |
Used to Destruction | i
“They make it look as if Catholics thought there must be one justice for Rome and another justice for all! other cities in the world. They! make it look as if Catholics were]! s¥rious about tha war, to the need of winning the war, but| that for them there was a zone! where the war could not be fought.| tFor Catholics there is indeed!
RRA AS
8 We he small boy with his boat as
convinced as! °™® of the best human interest prints in the Indianapolis Camera club's exhibit. The picture, made by Jack Hutchinson, already has hung in five national salons. Shown with the mayor is Warner B. Trembley, president of the camera club. Eighty-one pictorial photographs made by club members are on | display at the John Herron art museum. The exhibit will continue until Aug. 8. The museum is open from 9 a. m. to 5 p. m. daily except Mondays and from 1 to 6 p. m. on Sundays.
sud a zone into which no hatred, no violence, no destruction can intrude; it is the zone of their faith, but that zone is not marked out, not bounded by any walls. That zone is not the city of Rome.” The publication, which has no official sanction from tne church, added that for “century after century” Catholics have built churches and then the churches, with the gities, “have fallen into ruin.” “They have seen them fall,” the editorial continued. “They are used to seeing them fall; Catholics have seen Rome deserted, in ruins. They ald see Rome in ruins once more, a desert once again, and their faith unbroken, the inviolable zone of their faith untouched.”
NEW DRIVE PLANNED ON EXCLUSION ACT
WASHINGTON, July 23 (U. P). =A, new drive for repeal of the CHinese exclusion act will be started when congress returns in September. Advocates of the proposal, headed by Rep. Warren G. Magnuson
State Deaths
BROOKSTON—Mrs. Mary Jana McCully, 70. Survivors: Daughter, Mrs. Joy Brackney; son, William N. McCuliy; brother, Howard Smith. CONNERSVILLE James Whittman, 80 Survivors: Sons, Joe and Charles Witt man; daughters, Mrs, Rose Kalkhoff and Mrs. Mayme McNelly. FT. WAYNE-Mrs, Catherine Yaest, 64, Survivors: Husband, “John W. Yaest; daughter, Mrs. Rosanna Raile; brother, Frank Bruber; niece, Mvs. Max Andrews
Mrs. Anna Samreta, 57. Survivors: Son, Joseph Sametra; brother, Thomas Gabry. nowicz. Mrs. Ida B. Yant, 61. band, Marion Yant; daughters, Mrs. Edwar Guenther and Mrs. Cecil Stair; sons, Kenneth, Fred, Edward and Richard
Survivors: Hus-
Yant; Metz. Mrs. Erwin Grover, 26. Survivors Husband, Mr. Erwin Grover; parents, Mr. and Mrs. Cecil D. Coil; brothers, Willaim and David Coil; sister, Miss Helen Coil. Adolph H. Doehrmen, 54. Survivors: Wife, Mrs. Martha Deehrman; daughter, Mrs. Velma Buuck: sons, Edgar and lawrence; brothers, William, Henry, Fred and Conrad, sisters, Mrs. Lewis Kline, Mrs. Edward Marhenke and Mrs. Joseph Carrier, FT. Survivors: Sisters Mrs. Frank Howey Schuckman, FRANCISCO--Mrs. Martha Eilen Hill, 65. Survivors: Husband, Frank Hill; daughters, Mrs. Cora Watkins, Mrs. Houghton, Mrs. Ethel Arnold and Mrs. Lillian Helderbaugh; son, George Hill; brothers, Leonard, Owen and Ben Thomp-
brothers, Lloyd Metz and Edward
WAYNE-—James E. Hughes, 16. Mrs. James T. Leary, and Mrs. Emma
HINT OFFICIAL ROME TO MOVE
Madrid Reports Verona, Far to North, May Be-
come New Capital.
LONDON, July 23 (U. P.).—Germany already considers Sicily lost and the Italian government, either preparatory to declaring Rome an open city or because of the growing danger of invasion of the mainland, may move to Verona, 260 miles north of Rome, reports reaching Spain said today. A neutral source in Italy revealed that there was considerable talk in Rome last week-end over the possibility that Italian government departments, along with the military, naval and air staffs, would shift headquarters to Verona, where Pre-
(D. Wash.), plan to sponsor new son; sister, Miss Lucie Thompson.
repeal legislation and move to force ity consideration by the house, The strategy calls for a petition to discha g the house Immigration com- 82. Survivors: Daughter, Mrs. Leinard mittee from consideration of the! Troup; son, Warren McCumsey. proposal if it fails to act favorably | JASONVILLE—Mrs. Minnie Connelly. within 30 davs | Survivors: Son, Hobart G. Connelly; ’ oui daughter, Mrs. William Whitlock. KOKOMO-Clyde Earl Layton, 58. Sure | Vivors: Wife, Lena; sons, Harold, Gerald R F N { and Robert; daughters, Geraldine Cope4 UV AND | land, Marcella Tate and Carolyn; sister, SEE : Mrs. Bertha Wyant. | LAFAYETTE--John B. Carey, 35. Sur-| | vivors: Wife, Mrs. John Carney, daugh-! | ter, Mary Jo; sisters, Mrs. Ruth Winkley | and Mary Alice Carney; brothers, Robert | Carney and Clarence Carney. LAFONTAINE—Mrs. Stella Owen, 67. | Survivors: Husband, Milton Owen; daughIt you're run | ter, Mrs, Lucille Stevens; son, Milford; a ga y { brothers, Roy Young and Leonard Young. a a Sov | MARION—Mrs. Sarah Jane Gabriel, 88 array dance jes. | Survivors: Daughters, Mrs, Emma 2
Pie Reg youn | Heil and Mrs. Lydia M., Scott; e.
feel. See why doc- f= ¥ | Georg tors recommend it hy ; { Mrs. Mae { Daughter, Mrs.
mother, Levaun;
vivors: Wife, Mrs. Earl Stewart; Mrs. Sadie Stewart; daughter, son, Ernest.
GOSHEN Charles Douglas McCumsey,
son,
Beavers, 64 Survivors: Eldo Seacat. |
FRANKFORT—Earl E Stewart, 57. Sur- |
mier Mussolini and
Before Rome Attack
The discussions actually preceded the 500-plane American raid on
Adolf Hitler conferred Monday, a Madrid dis-/ | patch asserted.
PHOTOGRAPHER MISSING
ALLIED HEADQUARTERS, Southwest Pacific, July 23 (U. P.). —Carl Thusgaard, 40, of Jamaica,
N. Y., an Acme News photographer, has been missing in action since July 20, it was anounced today. He was making a combat flight aboard a Liberator bomber which was shot down in a battle with nine Japanese zero planes after destroying two zeros and - probably destroying a third.
Rome Monday, it was pointed out,’ but Pope Pius XII's letter deploring the raid indicated that he had appealed to the Italian government to strip the capital of military objectives some time ago. (The German Transocean Agency reported that Premier Eamon De Valera of Eire had sent a message of sympathy to Pope Pius on the bombing of Rome.)
Concede Sicily Lost
Madrid reports that informed German military circles already
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Mayor Tyndall Visits Camera Club Exhibit
X
PAGE 5
PERKINS DIES AT ANDERSON HOME
Body Will Be Brought Here For Funeral; Burial in Westfield.
Clarkson Cornelius Perkins, former Indianapolis resident and operator of a creamery here, died last night at his home near Anderson. He was 73. Mr. Perkins moved his C. C. Perkins and Sons creamery here from Eagletown 26 years ago, and sold it in 1922. He then worked for the former Wiggan Brothers creamery. He moved on a farm near Anderson six years ago. Dur-| ing world war I he worked at Eli Lilly & Co. He was born in Hamilton county | |
near Hortonville, and was a mem- | ber of the Eagletown Friends church. | Survivors are his wife, Mrs. Fannie Moody Perkins; three sons, Leroy F. Perkins of Indianapolis, Fletcher H. Perkins of Nashville,
(
made for | Philadelphia, banker, home here yesterday. brother of Charley Ross, the kidnap victim,
Boa Constrictor
Bothers Citizens
WESTFIELD, N. J, July 23 (U. P.).—Bert Oldford’s neighbors began circulating a petition addressed to the mayor and council today demanding a new law to get the boa constrictors out of Oldford's back yard. Oldford brought the snakes — one 15-feet long and the other 10—back from Trinidad a month ago and keeps them under padlock. The other day, however, | one got loose and was half way |
up the front steps of the house | next door when Oldford caught it. | Now, the neighbors said, 1.0 one goes out at night anymore and children are kept in their own | vards. The petition calls the snakes “a menace to health, phy- | sical and mental . ., .”
{INTERNATIONAL BANKER Dios
SARANAC LAKE, N. Y., July 23 U. P.).—Funeral plans were being Walter L. Ross, 74, of | retired internatiohal | who died at his summer He was a
Tenn., and George M. Perkins of
Anderson; four daughters, Mrs, Edith Everhart, Miss Ethel Lentz,| Mrs. Edna Allen and Mrs. Esther Dowden, all of Indianapolis; nine| grandchildren, three great-grand-| children, and three step-grand- | children. The body will be brought to the) home of his daughter, Mrs. Dowden, at 1415 Kessler blvd. Bast dr. Funeral services will be held, Sunday afternoon and burial will be in Westfield.
BRITAIN LISTS DAMAGE
LONDON, July 23 (U. P.).—Home | Secretary Herbert Morrison, in a written answer to a question in| commons, said today that the war] damage commission had been noti-| fled of damage by enemy bombs to 13,805 church, monasteries, convents and other ecclesiastical build-
ings in Great Britain,
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Local boys make good in RCA Suggestion Campaign. They'll help launch Victory ship in Mobile tonight. Ceremony part of great radio program over the Blue Network Tonight 7:30, CWT, Listen in!
as the ideal way io keep fit, to soot! | MUNCIE—Arvan D. Simon, 27. Sur-|} i : ’ | Mu . mon, 27. | have conceded loss of Sicily to jumpy nerves. Im- | yvers: Wife, Mrs. Marceil Simon; sons, | yg alli Sicily Rex and Myron Simon; parents, Mr. and | the allies appeared me out by Mrs. Guy Simon; brothers, Galen, Herbert | Nazi broadcasts depreciating the | and James Simon; sister, Mrs. Max. . : ! Fisher. | island they once hailed as a Medi- | PATOKACharles Gieseke, 76. Sur-|terranean bastion as a “minor | vivors: Daughters, Mrs. Fred Ford and nost. | Mrs. George Ford; sons, Henry, Edgard island outpost. . i | and John Gieseke; brother, Dave Gieseke; | All axis garrisons in western sister, Mrs. Emma Knaub. | Sicily were reported by Madrid PRETTY LAKE -Emest LeRoy Lish, 65 to be fleeing eastward for a last stand at Messina. Only a small
Survivors: Wife, Eunice; sister, Mrs. Bd| Peterson; brother, Charles Lish. Sur- | percentage of Italo-German troo| | vivors: Wife, Mary Wickliff; sons, ora, | P¢ ze h troops
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What's behind this event? Here's the idea. Recently, a Suggestion Drive was inaugurated in all RCA plants under the auspices of their respective labor-management Production Drive Committees. More than 3,500 suggestions were turned in by the men and women of RCA. For each adopted suggestion, workers received substantial awards in War Bonds and Stamps. Top winners in each plant won the honor of helping to launch the Victory Ship that slides down the ways of the Alabama Dry Dock and Shipbuilding Corporetion in Mobile, Alabama tonight at 7:30!
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SHELBYVILLE Ora Wickliff, 47 | Kenneth, John and Everett: Eamgiters, | Probably can be evacuated across | Rose, Ruth; brother, Everett an ‘laude | the two-mile Messina strait, how- | “WARS. sister, Mrs. Gladys Hatton. | ever, because of the preponderance INDIANAPOLIS PLANT | Wife, Mrs. Noah Fidler; sons, Lewis and —— RSE] Reliable information reaching HAS TWO WINNERS The CHICAGO STORE—146 E. Wash. = | Madrid from Italy asserted that : | bombed so heavily that efforts to i Ly MH : i ete ® Be ane vita) 4 reinforce Sicily by sea virtually war communications equipment Until 6 P. M. | : Open Monday Night Until SP. M. |] SERVICES TOMORR | ow y Men's Regular $24.50 || FOR MRS. BRUBAKER ' CAL WORSTED the East Side Church of Christ, will jconduct funeral services for Mrs. Marietta Melvina Brubaker, 5350 ‘row at Shirley Brothers Irving Hill chapel. Burial will be in Mt. Jackson. yesterday at Methodist hospital after an illness of 10 years. A native of Fayette county, she 40 years. She was married to Francis Landis Brubaker in Tippecanoe county, June 16, 1891, and they in Lafayette. She was a member of the East Side Church of Christ. Survivors are the husband, a Harold I. Brubaker, and a brother, Isaac Newton Carver, all of Indianapolis; nine grandchildren and
WARSAW-—-Noah Fidler, §7. Survivors: of allied sea and air power. a All 5 5 | Italian mainland ports have been Charles Yanzer developed a new have been abandoned. 800 per cent. 2 ALL-WOOL | TR oP The Rev. Ralph West, pastor of |Burgess ave. at 1:30 p. m. tomorMrs. Brubaker, who was 75, died had lived in Indianapolis more than made their home for several years daughter, Mrs. Lora Mitchell: a son, five great-grandchildren.
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CAPTURE ITALIAN ADMIRAL
ALLIED HEADQUARTERS, North Africa, July 23 (U. P,).—Admiral Prieto Leonard, Italian naval commander who was in charge at Augusta, has been captured, it was announced today.
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