Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 27 September 1943 — Page 5
spite Protest.
(Continued from Page One)
spirit that is apparent everywhere,” boys get the
not really kids, and the youthtull
ind affection of all of them
¥
© land more economical use of workers, They don't complain; Mrs. Roosevelt
Edward R. Stettinius . .. he has
-{Cainmerce
‘|director, said he and most of his men was the brash way the women
: feeling they are forgotten out there, vey by the Chamber of Commerce and they can't understand anything showed that by curtailing hiring [that would slow war production. there actually would be a slight sur-{said, “they only ‘ask why." plus by the first of the year. When the men reporters entered Attending ‘the Chicago meeting |the green room of the White House are George A. Kuhn, Chamber of Where the conference was held, they president; C. Harvey met a barrage of wisecracks from ‘Bradley, representing industries, and (the women. One man reporter tried Myron R. Green, representing the to hide in a corner, explaining that Indianapolis area manpower com he felt as though he had “blundered mittee. A into the powder room of an art Protest to VanNuys gallery.” Powers Ha| regional C. 1. O.| What really flabbergasted the
colleagues are opposed to the No. 1 asked personal questions. classification because they believe) “Mrs. Roosevelt,” one asked, there are still many persons here “aren’t you a good bit thinner?” unemployed who could be working. | Mrs. Roosevelt said. why, yes, she A letter asking that the No. 1/was, but she wouldn't say how
word for the gorrillas who dosed’
Of Defeat.
(Continued from Page One) outtion. north of Salerno. where
themselves on indecency means, *I|the Nasis were defending the most Don't Give a Damn.” direct route to Naples, that the “Me ne frego” was a fit watch- fighting was described. as the flerc-
road
decent people with castor ofl, and the Alamein line before Alexandria who attacked Ethiopia and Spain|and started the histotic push westwhile we stood around with our ward. hands in our pockets and wight Drive 12 Miles them. t pened to ar The 8th. army's advance to. Oerig“Mé ne frego” is also a fitting cry Pola, on the Foggia plain, reprefor the human wretches who wend [sented a 12-mile push {from Canosa their way homeward today. Their{and put the British vanguard 22 country is a battleground between
the Germans. whom they instinc-|Dig cénter in allied hands, Naples tions before Kiev. Kremenchug,
tively hate, and the allies, whom |Will have been outflanked strategicthey instinctively respect. Yet there (ally if the Sth army has not bythey are going, some to mamma and | Passed it more directly by then. their wine and spaghetti, without! On the Adriatic coast the British honor and without victory, not giv- [pushed five miles north from Baring a hang what may happen if |letta to seize Margherito di Savoia,
Now Get Castor oil | rignt Bank ‘ater seven days of in-| i *|cessant. fighting captured heights dominating :
‘est since the British 8th army broke’ The newspaper Pravda sounded a
t's New Deal projects and what is needed in the state deed many of his Wall Street partment. ’ to his way of thinking.
+ Gets Along With People agencies also went their own way. : It lead to a lot of confusion. | As undersecretary of slate lis| As now set up théy can deal with usine experience and executive!Leo T. Crowley, or his agent, Crowibility will make him invaluable, if ley Rens he new FEA which = hot 3 2 what the o of foreign econom ot unique. Diplomacy — the art administration embracing those pf geting along with peoples ggencies will be called. : d, of course, and he has what! The zation actually is the “takes. climax of the dispute between SecSoon there is to be a meeting in|retary of Commerce Jesse Jones and joscow between the Russian, Brit-Vice President Henry A. Wallace, sh and American foreign ministers, -
here has been doubt whether «3 ee Jat i void ei BURNS. PROVE. FATAL
n, could go in his place? The § ew ov meer on FOR LOUIS Me RINGO ==
The area affected includes not never “dreamed” of saying such a only Indianapolis and Marion coun- sthing. -
“If Secretary Hull's doctors forbid! Louis M. Ringo, 1944 Central ave, him to make the trip, his under- who was burned Saturday while usretary can pinchi-hit for him. Mr. |ing oil to kindle a fire at his home, jtettinius has been to Moscow a/died last night at Methodist hoshumber of times. He knows the pital. He was 65. - Russians and the Russians know—| Mr, Ringo, an uncle of State ‘Treasurer James M. Givens, was
Ind) by Carl H. Mullen, president of the Indiana State Federation of Labor: Carl Vestal, president of the Marion County central union; Otto 8. Suhr, secretary of the Marion
Indiana building and construction trades council. ; 2 Not ‘only was there agreement among representatives of management and labor, but Wilfred Bradshaw, director of the WMC for this area, also concurred in the belief
ty, but Putnam, Hendricks, Shelby, | Morgan, Pranklin, Hancock, John-
listing be prevented was sent to Senator Frederick VanNuys (D. had lost 20 to 30 pounds,
Another woman reporter asked on her trip. Mrs. Roosevelt care-
and only one seat" on “regular government transports.” adding
travel where she went. A woman reporter then asked
Mrs. Roosevelt took the
After much squinting, a man reporter doped it out that Mrs, Roose-
ison and Hamilton counties which velt, for her first conference after
|afe in the Indianapolis war manpowér area. CH
il et io ay for a brief | porn at Commercial Point, Ky., but STATE GOP BACKS
ini He and Mrs, Hull will spend a few days in Hot prings, Va., possibly to enable Mr. Hull to go to Moscow, 5 Career Men Agrpge Even old career men agree that he fits the needs of the times like Super-charged plane fits the air8 They say that very likely he ‘Is an advance sample of what jure diplomats will have to be. Now that the offices of lendadministration, foreign relief rehabilitation operations and ponomic warfare h@ve been consol-
ated, there is a readiness to. actnowledge that the previous set up
lived here many years. He was emoiosed oy the 3. . Bastman & co. MACKINAC RESOLUTION {dry cleaning firm, for more than 20 years. He was a member of the, .. __. noicies Eagles. diana Republicans has approved the Survivors include his wife, Pronia, "0 "EP CL CO A esolution {who was burned trying to save him; adopted at Mackinac island. {two daughters, Mrs. Roger Banks “We do not deceive ourselves, jand Mrs. Charles Austermiller: 8/, over that the adoption of this 'son, James L.. four sisters, Mrs.| .ioment means the final accom-
{Kate Deering, Mrs. George M. Giv-|n;ihment of our objective,” the
{
{ens, Lillian, and Mrs. Fred G. Eller-| ites stated in a letter to its
“man; two brothers, William A. and | ..mhers
Ernest, and two grandchildren, June! «rhe Republican national conRingo and Sally Banks. vention is the-only body that can Funeral services will be held at speak with finality for our party,
1:30 p. n=. Wednesday at the Hisey we must continue to urge that only
lace, shoes and stockings.
EMMERT JOINS FOES
” sentenced to 15 years in- prison. {reinforcements in an attempt to The executive committee of the! Y NY GRANT The allied army has not come to halt the 5th army's offensive, but of In-
{Continged from Page One) said that body would launch an in-
laws effective. Btate blamed the lag on printing dimculties, Speaking against the appropriation, Municipal Court Judge John L. Niblack declared: “If this appropriation is made, you'll hear the loudest anvil chorus in history, and it won't be coming from the sym-
much. The. women estimated she
that there was no other way to
her trip, wore a blue suit, a neck-
they can only get away from it all.| Tne new line runs east from the As you watch them tramping/,egion of Amalfi on the Sorrento
Mrs. R elt ‘who footed ‘the bill along in the dust, tired, hungry. peninsula below Naples, through the
thirsty and depressed, you instine<!, 000 of San Cipriano, Acerno, Cal-
fully explained that she paid her | 'el feel sorry for them. Then, 88 4hrito, Muro, Atella, Montemilnne own expenses except the cost of county building trades council, and [transportation outside this country. Charles W. Kern, president of the She said she occupied “one seat
you look at those slogans again and |. Cernigoly to Margherita di Sadwell on a _féw memories, the feel- | wo distance of 110 miles. ing of commiseration give way to one of deep disgust.
Worse Than Castor Oil
Corsica Fall Imminent
| Occupation of all Corsica by { French miers and regular Shattered Salerno, after all, only | {1 oone a ai Thyar S0% what We newspaperinen OUr=|.ps and Corsican natives, appeared
Mrs. Roosevelt about a rumor. that! o" Sot that December morning imminent as the Germans fell back she once sald soldiers who had that the change should not be made been out of the country two years at this time. He communicated this would not be fit for marriage after Sinien to. WMG uficils in Ohi He ely Apart, sald she] tier. OF Worse, than Any of those |) vaned to their last days on the . women and children whose bodies Cap Bon peninsula of Tunis. Al-|
back in 1935, wher: 18 Italian bomb [0 0 tC Stern tip of the
ers blasted and burned Dessye in| ; tia 20 miles northern Ethiopia. The Italian boy | Sian running fom Mu
lying dead beside the road was no The plight of the Germans was
we picked up after that raid eight years ago when war still was a rare yo adventure. Those glum Italian officers walk- {hs remainin ing down the road, bound for Mes- |. coq sina, are far better off and far less
surrounding seas, ready
pounce on any attempt to evaclate ___ g enemy troops by alr |
The hardest fighting on’ the Italdeserving than those friends of ours jan mainland continued in the
Analysts Believe Success, May Force Allies to Change Tempo. (Continued from Page One) viet columns poured Into White
Russia through two wide gaps In the Smolensk and Gomel sectors.
| warning to Adolf Hitler that there. ' ‘would be no pause until the Soviet! Carry More Bombs | {army reaches the old frontiers and! The pioneering raid also wag {the Germans are decisively beaten. .....4 by a hew method of ta Rounding out 13 weeks of the great yoo ~botiibé Inside the pi Juaunt ‘summer offensive, the Red Army ywnion 5 greater weight was carried was entrenched along practically ,o each ship, The Forts en the entire east bank of the Dnieper countered almost no fighter oppos
miles from Foggia itself. With that Ad Was bathing t6 hurl the Nass ition and ‘found the anti-aircraf}
out of their remaining east bank pre light, | The later waves of Fords ran in | Dnepropetrovsk and Zaporozhe. some fighter opposition, but th The Nazis were under constant pombers were so numerous that they {bombardment by the Soviet alrigverwhelmed the attackers and we: {force which enjoyed unchallenged pelieved to have shot down a mastery of the skjes over the battle number. ! | The Fortresfes struck in such [large force fhat they spread theif over the entire Emden
areas Fight Delaying Action
In the Kremenchug area between explosive. « Kiev. and the river bend the Ger- &rea. mans were reported fleeing across T
/the Dnieper under a merciless SY : pounding by Soviet assault planes. basis. British Mosquito bombers ats
[There and before Kiev the Ger- | tacked targets - in the German [man remnants were reported fight- Rhineland last night and other ing bitter delaying actions to cover formations of Fortresses penetrated the retreat to the west bank. % lls sa of Pall 3nd waned : _'the mpagne a Ee Me Dacprobeirotak ap: Junkers 88 repair plant at Rheims stage as the Russians smashed the YoSterday. last belt of German defenses based All Planes Safe on the marshes ‘flanking the ap- Canadian intruder planes shot proaches to the town. Bloody hand- down a German bomber while on to-harid combats were raging in the patrol over Holland last night. All eastern suburbs-of the city. planes returned safely from night | On the plains southeast of Zapo- operations, rozhe the Soviet army swept over a. The American raid on Emden was
“raid put the allied air offens back ‘on an around-the-clock
lied naval and air forces, patrolled area; increasing the threat to the fourth of the war on the north-
the Crimea. west Germany -naval base,
YI J
vestigation to inquire why the 1943| masses as well as possible, reserve. ‘N APLES APPEARS : had not yet been" made ing special treatment only for those | 1 hk officials have who have closely identified them-
thom we saw-packed into a cage yygped mountains guarding the ap-
Tribunal” 13 long years ago, being German command threw in heavy
Italy to exact retribution for any the American and British invaders of the crimes of fascism, domestic continued to inch forward. or international. It is our fixed determination to treat the Italian
selves with fascism. It is purely an accident of war that Italian towns have been battered, that hundreds of thousands of former soldiers, having deserted the army, clutter South Portland, Me. up the highways, Dyer was awarded the distinguished service cross recently after Revenge Without Hate - {piloting a burning plane until all
A DESERTED CITY’
(Continued from Page One)
in the courtroom of the “Special proaches to the Naples plain. "The.
be in Crown Hill.
& Titus funeral home. ‘Burial willie taking a forthright position in
phony either. It'll be coming from
Thus, retribution is not deliber-
other crewmen had taken to para-
N. o family » through :
lack of immediate
et
| an administrative mess which iid some good work in spite of itsel!.
Yd free asencies Waly rear $38,000 in Bonds Bought of Stout
bperations for which the field will xpand instead of contract; Yet} — independent. af eah THE MEN and women at Stout Divided authority. led to squabbles| field have gone to war and taken n the field where a representative| their dollars with them. Pf lend-lease, for instance, could] g, far they have purchased nd usually did work independnly of representatives of the| More than $38.000 in war bonds to Mice of economic warfare or of “back the attack of the third war m relief. and rehabilitation. | loan drivé almost 100 per cent. "these ter | The original quota was set for | $5000, but that figure was discarded and a quota of $25,000 substituted. This mark was | passed at the end of the drive's ; | second week. : Campaign officers expect the final total for the army air base, including the purchases by civilian employees, to be close to $50,000.
favor of post-war international cooperation can our party hope for success in 1944." The committee also praised the Indiana congressional delegation for voting in favor of the Fulbright resolution which calls for participa tion by the U. 8. in international machinery to keep peace.
INQUEST OPENS IN
PHILADELPHIA, Sept. 27 (U. P).—Coroner Herbert M. Goddard today opened an inquest into the deaths gf -80 persons killed in the
A “blue ribbon” conorer’s jury was assembled to return individual verdicts in each death. It was ex~ pected this would consume all the
planned to hold a second next Monday to determine the cause of the wreck.
TAGGART CONDITION ‘GOOD’
funds « need ever be
vey of Sunday radio listener interest - indicated that a large majority of Indianapolis citizens never tune in the Sunday symphonic Other Opinions Chamber President George Kukn previously had announced he
WRECK FATAL TO 80 thought the appropriation would
“set a very bad precedent. I dont know why a woman who owns a $5000 house down on South st.
Sept. 6 wreck of the Congressional {should pay one or two cents on my limited
symphony ticket.” The appropriation, if adopted, would demand a total tax levy of one cent, George Whiteside, an-
from the budget.
A
djsgruntled taxpayers.” ate: He pointed out that a casual sur-
J other tax board member, thought problem; temporarily, they may be time in the opening session. It vas|the opinion invalidated the a] po y y y session tion altogether, and observed eventually they will have to find t it probably would be stricken regular means of support.
Another hearing on the contro- war, the allies actually are con-
;. it constitutes no burden on our conscience. The Italians themselves regard it as a sort of act of God, and that is probably just what | it is. : . What is going to come out of this moral and material mess into which | Italy is plunged, is beyond the possibility of imagination. . Towns in the immediate neighborhood of Salerno are so shattered they will have to be rebuilt, house by house. Ever. farmhouses are. generally shattered beyond repair, and refugees returning from the hills ‘can only thank their stars that it is not raining. . What will be done with thousands of former soldiers who are now réturning to their homes in southern Italy and Sicily is still another
used to clear up the rubble, but
Now, for the first time in this
chutes, then jumped himself and landed {1 the midst of a tank battle in Sicily, from which he reached American lines. The first plane was called. “Dorothy Anne” in honor of his wife.
“We flew in low over Mt. Vesuvius; which was giving out a feather column of white smoke from which splattered black lava like spilled chocolate icing. r : We circled Naples harbor and I could see nine ships; three of which were.sunk and the remainder badly
traffic, . * The port works had been flattened
An oll refinery was in flames southeast of Naples. Ra!
been blown to bits, BRITISH SINK U-BOAT i
LONDON, Sept. 27 (U. P.),—Brit- |
listing. There was no maritime
by allied bombs and possible Ger. man ‘demolitions, but Naples itself appeared intact. 5
Condition of Thomas Taggart, versial issue will be held Wednes- |
fronted with the problem of what ish naval patrols sank at least one
French Lick Springs hotel owner who underwent a major abdominel
day afternoon.
to do with a large country which | German torpedo boat and damaged |
denied the use of
{lway yards around Naples had, §
our finer facilities
operation Friday, was reported .as that Russia and Germany have up-|a result of victory. The problem |groups of E-boats near the British “good” today by Methodist hospital held their musical activities as an|is so enormous that even partial east coast early Saturday, the ad-| officials. :
Lt. E. L. Mills Killed in Action
ad te 5h ss m oe
Mayor Tyndall stated, “I notice has fallen to their responsibility as several others in driving off several P t f M f l t I I d Ra
imperative morale builder.” solution would be a triumph, miralty announced today.
During Air Battle Over China
SGT, EARL E. RECTOR, ar- | st, who have already lost two sons | morer and communications man | in the service of their country. |} -A card from Coxswain Craig
velle ~ “Steamed-In-Cream”
Lustrous to look at . . . divinely soft
or ll the family wo |
an army air fogce bomber,
¥5 2
!
! i
i
i! £ g=
5 ¥ fel £3
SeBriE Hi :faih sill! het; i
J pil i Ewiofw
fs JETTE ht Ef fis. i
i 4
&
:
he
§i
A graduate of the navigation |
was received by Joseph McCor-
r x A Pa —was in Japanese. char. and husband of u wv the mailing date could Mrs. Estelle rmined. : Rector, all of brother, Nelson Leroy Pt. Harrison.
He has been carrier Langley was struck,
his younger brother, Russell destroyer
COXSWAIN CHARLES FRANK CRAIG, who has been missing in action 15 months, is a prisoner of the Japanese in the
| mick, 933 N. Belle Vieu place, an | ' old friend of the family. The | of Sl © card bore the imprint ‘of the Mrs. 4 Japanese Imperial army; but the |
to the touch. Each strand of your hair is gently bathed in rich cream while it is being steamed. =
Fiesta “Kerchief-Kurl”
Beauty and b ‘ a 298
ely wave.
| | i
wr
