Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 26 July 1943 — Page 2
oo
Clare Boothe Luce
WHY WONDER WHOM T0 CALL?
When need arises, select the firm preferred by an increasing number of Indianapolis families —Harry W. Moore Peace Chapel. We provide every facility for comfort
and convenience at
costs any family can afford.
AARRY-ULTOOR
PEACE CHAPEL 2050 E. MICHIGAN ST. =~ CHERRY 6020
py . . we . : Coa Ee Sd ey az . ‘ £ WRT 3 - Y 4 . i # . Aree THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES MONDAY, JULY 26, 1943 Mussolini's Fall P Ww Clare Luce's Col f FS d Ss ra aves ay are Luce s voiumn ror al gdurrenaer f For P Bid by Itali 2? Army Is Banned From P | "Only T With Iltaly'—Hull or Feace bid by Italians) FIGHT HARDER? rmy Is Banned From Paper ‘MONEY GROUPS’ Only Terms With Italy ull | (Continued from Page One) | NEW DELHI, July 26 (U. P.).— —— (Continued from Page One) fascist militiaman, the king must)of Mussolini will sha ik 0: A war department ban today de- vy: : : ; woes in Sicily i have felt pretty certain his|an earthquake. ne Military Leader at Helm prived the army newspaper, CBI Vice President Says ‘Selfish lied forces h Selly, Ha Said they, Jae shou he Sas! on Japa ground. He must have known that|and Bulgaria can not fail to see the| ’ Roundup, of its congresswoman- y ’ [ite fshting lice the devy and, © i No Haliant Sve Opens k the duce had shot his bolt and lost| handwriting on the wall. Italian | May Change Army S columnist—Clare Boothe Luce—and Interests Oppose FDR’S [keeping our minds on the fact will Sd Ls Was sive Japag would take Er Se a Een Suet ln Morale. Ro i Da se Program. Fo sala Te ad tof formation], 10 Particslar consultations are in from fascism was demented gd | they remain, they will be even less| reaucracy Este ’ Sy» Ee the A FC Wien Great risa shout majority of his subjects. |effective than formerly. | fContingsd om Page One) After 11 weeks in which Mrs. DETROIT, July 25 (U. P)~Vice overthrow in Germany or any infor ip — py gi The early abdication of King Vic-| The Balkans, therefore, the Premier Marshal Badoglio, hoping Luce contributed free a regular col- President Henry A. Wallace yester-| gation regarding Mussolini's pres-\pe talked about. Fugther military tor Emmanuel, if not exactly ex- vulnerable back door to Hitler's to represent themselves as also hav- umn to the publication for U. S. sol- day bitterly accused powerful self-|ent whereabouts. | developments ust be awaited he pected, would sprprise no one. He | European fortress, may soon be wide ing been pro-allied and now ready diers in China, Burma and India, ish interests — “some call them | said belongs to the ancient house of open. The history of 1918 may re- to conclude a separte peace. (the war department ordered the American fascists"—of trying to Hull said he believed he could be Savoy, oldest reigning dynasty of peat. Germany, her support crumb-| As a condition of this peace, such [feature discontinued. : PURCHASED LIQUOR most helpful by assembling the Europe. He would rather die than!ling about her, again stands face to fascists would probably demand to! The order was issued under reg- tear down What President Roosevels facts and studying them carefully have the crown torn from his fam-|face with disaster. |be allowed to hold on to their pos- ulations which prohibit material has achieved on ‘ihe Qomestic front ‘before commenting furt} of he a 10! ions rib ‘as during the past 10 years. ting further 3 ily. Not that he, personally, must aire sessions and privileges. |containing matters of political con- [= “ » : THEN MADE ARRES course which he said he had hold on. But after Savoy ad pro- Names mentioned especially here troversy from being printed in sol- : These men," he said iy al ag. ‘adopted vided kings in Italy for nearly 1000 VOLUNTEER HELP las likely to be among such a group dier newspapers. 2 dress on post-war policy, “hope to] One man who made the mistake a. years, he does not want to go down, lare: Count Galeazzo Ciano, 1 Roundup editors, who last week take Sivgriase of ye presidents oz selling a bottle of liquor to a| BURGLAR GETS $150 CASH In history as the one who failed to 'Duce’s son-in-law, who was recent- suggested editorially that Mrs. Luce a on DF ie War effort Io|piainclothes man was among those glary in cash ¢ pass the torch ; & we. ltr . i vel] destroy everything he has accom- ted vesterday f 1 A burglary of $150 in cash and along. ly transferred from his post as for- try for the vice presidency to get a li rer the last 1 [9fTes YeS\SrCaY OF * yiolating! $91 in checks was reported to police Loval te Ki eign minister to the ambascadorship “Neat pair of gams presiding over plished over the lash 10 years, Some liquor Jaws. and on other visei $71 th Clecas way % Garland yal to King Although the last of more than | to the Holy See in Rome, and Count the senate,” will announce the order eas them isolationists, others call| charges. | today by e Sambe ¢ ik an That royal but very human de-|3,300,000 copies of war ration book Dino Grandi, formerly ambassador in the next issue. Maj. Fred Eld- them ‘reactionaries,’ and still others| patrolman Wayne Bear charged Coal Co. ne, 1432 w. So ost: ve : . | 2 | : | pj ; ’ |call them ‘American fascists.’ ” 1 + | Burglars are said to have broken a sire is another thing that gives 3 were placed in the mails yester- to London. ridge, Roundup chief and formerly RES rn | et Ralph Williams, 2703 Shriver! y i RAL 8 ) ; ; oomaL. : : inmbe | “Sooner or later the machinations | ave sold him the li in the 400 | Window and forced open the safe special significance to the appoint-/day, the task is not yet completed | Badoglio has always been known of ‘the Les Angeles Times, inqieat lof these small but powerful roups! 5 i equ dn Ve | last night ment of Marshal Badoglio. He is Accord to OPA officials vol ‘| as the “king's man,” and Victor Em- ed there would be no accompanying |which put money a es rst | Of Asties st. ie —— : not only anti-fascist: he is 100 per | mw vmcia’S vo un hanuel certainly was Il Duce’s man, comment. lana ople last will inevilably so. Chester A. Jeltz was charged with Advertisement cent loyal to the King It any cen. | L2ETS are now needed to complete since he supported Mussolini for 21/ Attacked New Deal | peop h vi V violating the beverage act at the, A sthma and Hay eral can rally the people now ana NC, fling system for checking late years. ~|in the decade of the Tubber-stamp |*¥Posed 10 Lie uo SR who talk | 08 Cabin tavern, 524 Indiana ave. gave the throne for Saver Ht bo applicants. "Incidentally it was the king who _ Plans for the column entitled | congresses.” lances ToiH Rock to. the coud oid and Mary Stepp was arrested on a Fever Treatment Badoglio. “5 Stor oe WHO hive Nie i | 2PPlY| refused to give Badoglio petimission Here the Gavel Fell,” were born { Binjler naige on S. Capitol ave. If the king can not save himself, | “|to fire on Mussolini’s revolutionary ! he will try to pass the sceptor on oy 10 So a a La; fous. | thugs when they matched on Rome, Umberto, the crown prince. If that| from their local rationing board or October, 1922. fails, he may abdicate in favor of ang by sending it to the mailing Batieglio is sald to have Proksted his 5-year-old grandson, the Prince | center. 36 S. Pennsylvania st strongly at that time, saying that of Naples, son of Umberto and] The center will continue to operate | i vo Eaitalions of Carabinien; Princess Maria Jose, daughter of the| from 8 a. m. to 5 p. m. every week | 1° could sweep out “these fascist late King Albert of the Belgians|gay and the county defense council RpStarts. and sister of the present king, Leo-|wi)| continue its recruitment of} Fought TI Dre pold I'I, now a prisoner of the|yolunteers for the work yet to be| The new premier is Italy's best Nazis, done, | soldier. It is known that he has An “Earthquake” | is frequently told the king that the Maris Jose, popular with the! N. Y. LIVING COSTS UP | Italian army was not strong enough Ytalians, might become queen regent; NEW YORK, July 26 (U. Py. nnestae Sampbaigns of world and so save the succession for the wage earners and lower sulavie| SOmingtion, He Jas Strongly opSavoy line. clerical workers in New York city | 7°50 : 3 Invasion ol Al Sania . : . : : bck . v land Greece in 1940 and ‘resigned But Washington is less interested | found their living costs increased ic post as chief of staff of the in what happens to the Savoys than | 1.3 per cent from May to June, pri- | Italian army after that fiasco. In the possible or even probable marily as a result of higher food| hese disagreements brought him collapse of Italy as a member of|costs, the national industrial con- into more than one violent conthe axis. Envoys here say the fall| ference board reported today. flict with Mussolini. Now that he has been called in to attempt an eleventh hour salvation of his country, it is felt that, in accord with his military reputation, Badoglio will do his utmost to organize resistance on the Italian mainland. It is possible that the Italian army will now put up a stiffer fight than it has shown in Sicily, knowing that a real soldier has taken over the government. Physical conditions of communication and supply will make this difficult, however. Badpglio will feel justified in accepting an allied offer of honorable capitulation, it is believed here, when he sees that the forces against him are superior and that it is useless to sacrifice further the lives of his army and of the population. J. E. FITZPATRICK DEAD AT ANDERSON ANDERSON, Ind. July 26 (U. P.). —J. E. Fitzpatrick, 47, eastern division sales manager of the Ward Stilson Co.; died of pneumonia in a hospital here today. Fitzpatrick was stricken at Reading, Pa., Tuesday and was brought here. He was with the Ward Stilson Co. for 17 years and at the time of his death was a stockholder. Surviving are the widow, Mrs. Lucille Fitzpatrick, his mother, a daughter, a son, two brothers and a sister. 87 R. R. RECEIVERSHIPS WASHINGTON, July 26 (U. P.). —As of Dec. 31 last, 87 railroads remained in receivership, involving a total investment of $5,131,042,653, according to. a report of the interstate commerce conmmission.
LAUNDRY SERVICE
“om
; RECEIVED BY 9 A. M.—READY NEXT DAY
—
y_—~ —
For those who must have laundry serviced in a hurry, United's Special Service is maintained in spite of today's
war time problems.
CLEANING SERVICE
Cerranwy we are very busy, but we feel this service is a very important factor in our effort to meet the public's
requirements.
These Special Services Are Available at All 13 Conveniently Located Stations!
before Mrs. Luce was elected to con|gress from Connecticut. During the |first Burma campaign, Mrs. Luce visited here and made a host of {friends among the staff of Lt. Gen. Joseph W. Stilwell. But the suggestion produced nothing—even the Roundup was just an idea then— until after her election. The column became one of the most popular of the Roundup’s features. In one of her columns Mrs. Luce reposted that the price fixing efforts at home had left “consumer and producer alike with tongues hanging out, eyes rolling dizzily and the larder, pocketbook and gas tank empty.” The office of price administration, she said in another was “Caesared by Democratic Lame-Duck Prentiss Brown” and was headed for a blowup; new deal agencies “are fleeing like Eliza crossing the ice, while the blood hounds of congress close in.” She added that the president is “power hungry.” Her first column expressed feeling for “young people of the United States raised
GREENWICH, Conn., July 26 (U.|days, asserting that. they mean the
P.).—Rep. Clare Boothe Luce ex- | pressed regret today at a war de-| partment ban killing her column, “Here the Gavel Fell,” but added: “My pen is no longer at your service in CBI, but it is and always will be here at home.” Mrs. Luce said she had many “flattering” offers from syndicates to write a column, but turned them down because it “seemed to me a patriotic privilege and great honor to write exclusively and without any remuneration for our men overseas.” “I felt I had been completely fair and unbiased in my presentation of the Washington scene,” she said, “but it is now clear that I must have been in the hair of those who are not anxious to have our men overseas know how many people feel about the home front. “I note with interest that my column was not suppressed until congress had recessed. To all loyal readers of the Roundup, to your able and courageous editors, to the men of Stilwell, hail and farewell.”
what has happened, and I feel that the fall of Italy is imminent two or three weeks, perhaps. It is highly possible that the Italian people, though miserably tired of war, will turn and fight on our side.” 2 n
FRANK L. MARTINO, attorney at 508 Banker's Trust building, said that “Mussolini was the cause of the destruction and collapse of Italy. Italians in the United States have been unanimous in their condemnation of him and the Fascist regime. “I never have had any use for Mussolini or his followers.” “He lived 10 years too long,” was the laconic comment of Phillip Gerini, proprietor of the Home Lunch, 325 Massachusetts ave. From many came the expression that Italy's fighting days in this war are nearly over, = ” 2
SALVATORE MASCARI, 9%48 S. East st., predicts that the ousting of Mussolini will bring peace between Italy and the united nations within 10 days. Meanwhile officials of the internment camp for Italian soldiers at Camp Atterbury and post public relations officers had no comment on prisoner reactipn to the news. “All news releases of such nature would have to be approved in Washington,” Lt. Wesley Jones,
Italians in Indianapolis Cheer News of Duce's Fall
(Continued from Page One)
| foreign
the reaction of prisoners of war on political changes. This is definitely political.’ ” » ” NEVERTHELESS, if the Italian prisoners of war are aware of the | situation in their homeland, it | undoubtedly is not causing great | SOrrow. | On June 10 of this year The Indianapolis Times carried a war department, bureau of public re-lations-approved United Press story on the Italians at Atterbury. It began, “A mention of Hitler or Mussolini is greated with a lusty Bronx cheer by the Italians held as prisoners of war in the internment camp here.”
RITES SET FOR SLAIN MANAGER OF PAPER
CLEVELAND, July 26 (U. P.).— Services will be held Wednesday for John S. McCarrens, 74, general manager of the Cleveland Plain |
}
Dealer and twice president of the American Newspaper Publishers’ as-
midnight Saturday.
at St. Vincent hospital after an | operation for removal of a bullet | from his abdomen. He had been shot by Herbert L. Kobtak, former | language newspaper publisher here at the Plain Dealer
post public relations officer said. “We are not permitted to voice
‘committed suicide.
office Thursday afternoon. Kobrak
USE
Simple, easy,
can't come in,
TRAVELERS’ CHEC
system, too!
Peoples ground SAFE, costs
PERSONAL or COM
to this bank.
THF PEOPLES
130 E. Market St.
Member Federal Deposit
“Peoples State™ The Friendly Bank
for ALL these services
BANK BY MAIL ACCOUNT
SAFE. “for deposit only” is safe in the mail.
For Service Men and Travelers everywhere, Protect your funds with Travelers’ Checks.
CHECKING ACCOUNTS*
A check is a receipt. A checking account is a goed bookkeeping
SAFE DEPOSIT BOXES
“Jess than a penny a day.”
Personal Loans for taxes, repairs on homes, ete. Commercial loans for business needs.
*SERVICE MEN-—Make your Army-pay allotment In a joint checking account, it will be here when she needs it.
Your cheek endorsed If you
MAIL IT TO “PEOPLES.”
KS
Why risk your cash?
floor vault is convenient,
MERCIAL LOANS
STATE BANK
Insurance Corporation
BUY WAR BONDS
time when there was “plenty for the few and scarcity for the many.” Then, departing from his text, he added—"“or the days when Washington was only a way station in the suburbs of Wall Street”—A charge he had made at a press conference here Saturday.
Introduced by Thomas
Introduced by R. J. Thomas, president of the United Auto Workers (C. I. 0), as “the architect and crusader for a new world,” Wallace declared that world leadership of the future should concern itself with “welfare politics” instead of “power politics.” During his attack on “powerful interests,” he mentioned no names, nor did he mention what was very much in the public's mind, his recent rebuke by the president over his row with Secretary of Commerce Jesse Jones. He stood stanchly behind President Roosevelt, declaring that “I have known the President intimately for 10 years, and in the final showdown he has always put human rights first. “Three months ago in South America,” he said, “I found the lowliest peon looked on President Roosevelt as the symbol of his dearest aspirations in the peace to come. So it is also in China and occupied Europe.” Declaring that America’s destiny is world leadership in the peace to come, Wallace pleaded for a fuller democracy as the real preventative of war, and said we should begin by practicing the four freedoms in| our own back-yards. He nmientioned | race riots, slums, poor health and “the denial of the right to vote for millions of our own people” as foremost in our task at home.
‘We Must Lead’ :
“When we as victors lay down our arms in this struggle against the enslavement of the mind and soul of the human family, we take up arms immediately in the great war against starvation, unemploy-
OR
ment and the rigging of the mar- =
kets of the world,” he said.
“We will not be satisfied with a |S
peace which will merely lead us from the concentration camps and
mass murder of fascism into an in-|= ternational jungle of gangster gov-|E operated behind the|S scenes by power-crazed, money-mad |=
ernments
imperialists. “The world was waiting for us
to take the initiative in leading the E
Company, 1413 Lane Building, St. Mary's, Kas., manufactures a medicine for the relief of Asthma and Hay .Fever .symptoms .in .which they have so much confidence that they will send by mail a regular $1.25 bottle to anyone who will write for it. Use it according to directions on label and after you are completely satisfied, pay only If not satisfied, you owe Send your
Wilfred Terry,
formation of an operative who had name and address today, stating
visited the tavern. 0 O00
DOWNSTAIRS ȣ AYRES
JA AR
way to a people's peace after worid E war I, but we decided to live apart! = sociation, who died shortly before | and work our own way. E
“Hunger and unemployment
McCarrens suffered a fatal relapse spawned the criminal freebooters of | &
fascism. Their only remedy for
insecurity was war.
“The creation of a decent diet for | E
every family will take as much plan-
ning as the building of new cars| s
and refrigerators.” He said if we are to mobilize for peace, we must avoid scarcity economics, and he attacked monopoly practices of ‘holding inventions out of use and cutting down production.”
terms.”
ELLA C. M’KENZIE DIES AT SON'S HOME
Mrs. Ella C. McKenzie, a native |:
of Castleton, died yesterday at the home of her son, Edgar V. McKenzie, 1253 E. Troy ave. She was 79. She was moved from her home in Castleton about four months ago when’ she became ill. She and her husband, the late Lewis E. McKenzie, had operated a farm in Castleton. She was a member of Silver Leaf | Rebekah lodge of Castleton and the | Castleton Methodist church. _ Besides the son, survivors are another son, Glenn H. McKenzie of Lebanon; two sisters, Mrs, Ida Jacobs of Arcadia and Mrs. Lillie Hamilton of Castleton; two brothers, Harmon L. and Jefferson Brunson of Lagrange; four grandchildren, Dwight Imogene McKenzie, both of Indianapolis; Harold McKenzie and Mary Frances McKenzie, both of Lebanon, and a great-grandchild, Verne S. McKenzie of Indianapolis.
YOUR OLD BOXES ARE AMMUNITION!
Shell fuse parts, bomb bands, powder kegs, and other important military equipment are being made from old boxes, bags, brown wrapping paper, newspapers, magagines, and waste basket paper. The pubic is urged to save all forms of waste paper, to help relieve the critical waste pe: per shortage and avert a threatened curtailment of war prcduction of paper products. Flatten out baxes, stack loose paper into neat bundles. To sell your accumulation to a dealer. or to give
B. McKenzie and |:
He said we must have a |S “capitalism of abundance,” or re- |S turning soldiers ‘and jobless war|E workers “will speak in no uncertain |S
to charitable or other organizations, call a collector at MA rket 3321,
*
| which symipioms you have.
OE
i
OE
JUST ARRIVED!
A New Shipment of
SIZES 12 TO 20
You don’t need a pigtail to wear a pinafore! Just ‘cause it's a little girl fashion doesn’t mean it's strictly for children. Everyone is wearing pinafores . . . because they're pretty, practical and cool to work in, play in. The one sketched has white daisies and polka dots printed on blue, red or aqua pique. Button back, tie sash.
—Sportswear, Downstairs at AYRES
On Free Trial ~ Representatives of the prosecu- | ST, MARY'S, Kas.—D. J. Lane tor's office, sheriff's deputies and city police joined forces in a Saturday night raid at the Elite tavern, 1442 W. Morris st. the operator, and Terry Schaedel and Granville Schaedel, 1929 Howard st., were charged with operating a gaming house and gaming. They were arrested on warrants issued on affidavits prepared and |g os, filed by the prosecutor’s office on in- | nothing but a report.
on
Weir
or
nt a en Sn Pe
I a a.
A oi a sesame
