Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 25 August 1943 — Page 5
{ EY Great Britain, the : adi ¥ States, China and Russia enter into
~ threatening the territorial integrity
‘flying the flags of nations across|Comdr. Peabody,
Great Britain. tinued from Page One)
the war stricken nations. e said, should be admitted
Joint Police Setup United
s concord for' offensive or defensive joint action against any nation threatening to breach the peace. 3. Great Britain.and the United States enter into a permanent defensive alliance providing that they
act as one in case of attack upon either. Pe
4. The nations of North Amerfica and South America enter into a military and economic concord of ; American solidarity “guaranteeing \ 1 at every nation from Tierra del ego to the northernmost reaches of Canada will stand as one”
against any non-American nation of any. Most Powerful Fleet { 5. The United States build and
maintain the most powerful fleet in the world, an air force so numerous
WAVES SHOW OPENS TONIGHT
Advance Applications for Free Tickets Indicate
Full House. (Continued from Page One)
viL and efficient as to stand alone, and
8 standing army of sufficient size and training, and also take “by friendly Hog ating if we may, by occupation if - must” those points, those ads those bases ‘which will perfect the fortification of the United States.”
. “We do not want, we do not need, territorial aggrandizement,” land said. “We are reluctant to bugle corps, presentation of colors, extend our borders but we must at|the Star-Spangled Banner, introlast face realities. We must take duction of Mr. Geisel, introduction What .we must have. And we must |of Governor Schricker, introduction have such spots on the surface of|of P. R. Mallory, introduction of the earth as will ring this land |naval dignitaries, introduction of
sailors from naval armory, Indian-
- With a mighty circle of Gibraltars|Capt. Felix M. McWhirter.
through whose cordon no enemy can ever penetrate with invading Then Comes the Show army or fleet to redch our shores.” The mdvy men in charge say that In’ addition to Dakar and Casa-|8ll those introductions will require _blanca—“spearheads for the inva-{only a short time, then will come sion of the Americas"—Kelland|the “big show.” : said we must have permanent] Here's the program: ‘naval and air bases upon the Numbers by the Great Lakes islands of Iceland, Greenland, Ber-|band, oath ceremony for the ude and in the Caribbean sea. | Hoosier Patriettes,” certificate e Pacific. ocean, he said, should [Presentation to Lt. (jg) Frances be made an “American lake”|Rich, remarks (brief) by Comdr. through island fortresses. R.H.G. Mathews, inspector of the fifth joint service recruiting -and Policy of Insurance induction area for the navy; John
He also declared that we must |Carter, former Metropolitan opera
Pa ; ” star; the “Tune Toppers,” numbers Sdgavos to procure a cession” of," o «glyejackets,” Billy DeWolfe,
ery foot of American soil now mysician and Hollywood star; Lt. withdrawal of the sea.” This was taken as a ref- national colors. tickotaidtatt eren such h There may be some: tickets le one id as he Sout Aferieah at the WAVES recruiting station, 116 Monument circle.
peaking of his proposed de-| : fensive alliance between Great BUYS PATHFINDER Britain and the United States, Kel-| PHILADELPHIA, Aug. 25 (U.P). land termed it “a policy of insur-|—Graham Patterson, Philadelphia, ance for both nations” and said:|publisher of Farm Journal and “It will be the most tremendous|Farmer’s| Wife, announced ‘today step toward permanent peace in the|that he had acquired operating conworld that the mind of man can|trol of Pathfinder, a weekly news conceive.” magazine.
Kel- |apolis naval radio school drum and|’
31- YEAR- OLDS
Nazis. Rush Troops South
‘ |northern Italy was
Through Pass to Halt ++ Invasion. '(Continued from Page One)
German divisions. moving into|*
‘regarded in Algiers as smashing the last waning
hope that Italy would surrender inf |
advance of an invasion. ‘The recall of the 1906 class was taken as a sign that the Badoglio government appareritly has thrown its lot wholeheartedly with that of Germany.
Stamps Qut Fascism
" An Italian frontier dispatch said the Badoglio government was continuing its campaign to stamp out
-|the “last vestiges of fascism, how-
These three young women are among the “Hoosier Patriettes” who will be sworn into the WAVES during tonight's show at the Coliséum. Left to right are Thelma Lewis, 2815 N. Delaware st.; Mary Estelle Wright, 3117 Park ave., and Dorothy Metzger, 3777 N. Meridian st.
Jilted at Phone, Girl Trying Mail
BASHING on: Aug. 25 (U. —“Jilted” at the telephone Ba the seventh straight time last night, 21-year-old Bernice Edna Lynch is going to try the mails to get her man in far-away Natal, Brazil,
The pretty West Virginia girl spent three and one-half hours last night, minister by her side, waiting nervously ‘ for the overseas operator to connect with her fiance, Cpl. Bernard Trainor, stationed with the air transport command .in Natal.
It was her seventh try to ‘arrange a marriage. by telephone. She began trying last Friday, and after six failures to make connections, the war department, ‘Red Cross,” Pan-American Airways and the office of co-ordinator of inter-American affairs all stepped in to help. But their efforts. were in vain. After prolonged circuit trouble, the connection finally was made with Natal, but the only wotd the disappointed bride-to-be got was, “Cpl. Trainor is not able to talk - until further notice.” . Today, Miss Lynch is going to write to her betrothed to arrange a new telephone rendezvous.
11-YEAR-OLD BOY IS KILLED BY TRAIN
ALTOONA, Pa., Aug. 25 (U. P.).— Watching ‘a train pasing over the Pensylvania railroad tracks at Newton Hamilton proved fatal today for Melvin Gray Jr., 11, of Union, N. J., while his 7-year-old sister narrowly escaped death, It is believed the suction from the train pulled the boy toward the engine, and the cylinder struck him. Melvin’s body was hurled toward his sister and the force knocked her aside, saving her life,
LIVING ROOM GROUP INCLUDES:
i ’ Massive sofa and chair of striking’ beauty cos
attractive carved wood trim . . . distinctive \ dedibutok and Jong-menting cover. Two beau-
ever, ‘and had executed Vito Mussolini, nephew of the deposed premier, and Mario Appellius, one of Mussolini’s best known radio commentators, Reports ' reaching Madrid from Rome said Lt. Col. Ettori Muti, former secretary of the Fascist party and a well-known Mussolini henchman, had “died suddenly.” He held the gold medal for bravery and
{fought as an airman in Ethiopia,
Spain and Albania. Unconfirmed. reports heard on the Italian frontier said Mussolini himself had been shot in the stomach during the stormy grand council session which paved the way for his “resignation.” One story was that he had been shot by one of his own lieutenants and another said he was wounded by an unidentified general while leaving the Quirinal palace after an audience with King Victor Emmanuel,
Mussolini Detained?
Wounded or not, rhost reliable information was that Musolini was being detained in the. Braschi fortress in the outskirts of Rome. Vito Mussolini and Appellius were said to have been condemned by a special military tribunal and executed in the football arena eight miles outside Milan, a few weeks ago. They were ye after holding out for five days in ‘the Popolo d'Italia newspaper building in Milan with other prominent Fascists. The Italian call for 37-year-old men on leave to return to the colors
1covered: members of the infantry,
motorized infantry, grenadiers, tank forces, frontier guards, sapper units, air force and ground staff.
NO COAL SHORTAGE
1S SEEN FOR WEST|
“WASHINGTON, Aug. 25 (U. P.). -—A coal shortage in states west of the Great Lakes is unlikely unless movement of coal is concentrated too heavily in the closing weeks of the Great Lakes navigation season, Director Joseph B. Eastman of the office of defense transportation said yesterday. : Answering an. appeal to President Roosevelt by 18 senators and representatives from Minnesota, Wisconsin, Iowa, North and South Dakota, Eastman said transportation facilities are adequate to accommodate gll authorized movements of coal to states west of the Great Lakes unless a transportation jam results before winter,
The Rev. Virgil Hunt
U. B. CHURCH RENAMES HUNT
White River Conference Head of Denomination Re-elected. The Rev. Virgil G. Hunt, 4210 Otterbein ave., began a new term today. as superintendent of the White River conference of the, Chron of the United Brethren. He was re-elected yesterday at the 98th annual meeting of the conference at Hartford City, Ind, He has served as superintendent since 1938. st Bishop Dennis Presides Bishop Fred L. Dennis, 800 Middle dr., Woodruff Place, presided over sessions “attended: by 350 delegates from ‘churches in the conference. Bishop . Dennis conducted communion services following a memorial service for two, ministers and a pastor's wife, who died last year. . Those honored were the late Rev. Miliard Beal, who served at Smith Valley; the Rev. R. P. Lopp, a retired minister and Mrs. E. E, Plumley of Portland. A net gain in conference membership of 396 persons was reported. Assignment of ministers will be an-
nounced Friday at’ the closing session.
WAR AGENCY GIVEN 0. K. AFTER HEARING
WASHINGTON, Aug, 25 (U. P). —Rep.. Herman P, Eberharter (D. Pa.), member of a Dies subcommit-
tee which accused the war relocation authority of incompetence in handling Japanese-Americans, today praised the WRA for doing “a good job on a difficult problem.” He issued a long, dissenting: report, describing the critical findings of the committee wf jority as “wind and fury” climaxed by feeble, meaninglessrecommendations, and charged: “There was nothing in the evidence heard by the subcommittee that would bear out the implication that the program was being incompetently or inefficiently administered.”
iL AC 8 No More Frills In Wiring Money
‘WASHINGTON, Aug. 25 (U.P). and Postal
h Citizens’ Committee Named to Study Plan For Improvement.
The county council today passed a resolution authorizing its presi-
citizens’ committee to study and make definite recommendations on the building of a new courthouse or the remodeling of the present one.
continuing gift money order "wires with approval of the Federal communications commission. Previously singing telegrams holiday greetings were classified as non-essen
had asked for rmission to dent, Addison J. Parry, to appoint af 'anolish the gift money orders.
, SHIP TO BE LAUNCHED WILMINGTON, Del, P) ~The U. 8.
| USED CONTA NE MEDITERRA
Your old paper ; ew papers, an : and containers are being’ De into , parachute . flares, shell Tush 1 parts, and other war weapons, blasts: against the -enemy. Don’t | destroy any waste paper—save it, {and help destroy the Axis! Flatten: ahd lout used containers, stack “waste | basket paper and loose paper into | neat bundles. To sell your salvage, or give it to charitable or other organizations, call ‘a collector at MA rket 3321.
by the commis-
The telegraph companies
Aug. 25 (U.| S. Bostwick, - an-
The resolution specified ¢hat thefother of the navy's growing fleet,
committee should make jts study with a view toward possible com-
governmental agencies, and that it work independent of, but in co-op-eration with local planning groups. Mr. Parry said he would appoint a non-political group of eight or ten men. “We are all in favor of doing something about the antiquated
courthouse when the time is ripe,”
Mr. Parry said, “and we want to make plans so that we don’t rush to it blindly when the time comes ino ‘we can do something.”
Ha Baby, Returns To Work at Once
BALTIMORE, Aug. 25 (U. P.).
“—Mrs. Helen Robar, 42, who went home from work, had a baby and. reported back to work the next day, plans to get a temporary job in a cannery because her firm has a rule against new mothers working for 60 days after childbirth, Mrs. Robar declared stoutly she did not. “intend to sit around.” She said her mother and a grown daughter could take care of the new arrival, Shirley Anne, her eighth child. ‘ Her first child, now Cpl. Bernard R. McCartney, is with the U. 8. army overseas. The father of little Shirley’ Anne, Mrs. Robar’s second husband, is Sgt. Arthur C. Robar of the Canadian army, also overseas. :
FILM STAR ON STAND IN TRIAL OF SOLDIER
HOLLYWOOD, Aug. 25 (U.P.).— Lina Basquette, survivor of countless perils on the silent screen, was called as a witness today in the court-martial of Pvt. Paul Rimke, 22, an ex-convict who confessed he attacked the former actress. Miss Basquette, 34, but still attractive, told investigating officers that Rimke attacked her when she gave the hitchhiking soldier a ride. He Yorced her into the back seat and choked her, she said. Rimke said in his confession he started to choke her and then thought: “My god, what am I doing?” Miss Basquette said she would leave “Hollywood for “a long time” after the trial. “I know I won't be able to stand what people will say, reminding me of this,” she said. Her husband, Capt. Terry Hunt, is a former film colony physical culturist now with the army air forces.
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