Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 28 September 1943 — Page 3
after
entered the suburbs.
. Scattered street fighting continued ‘all night. Next day the Italian commander
Germans were to remain around Rome but would not
__enter the city proper. One official said “almost as soon
gs
few
7
le
it the German occupation and walked| ting began the night of Sept. 8 when the Ger-| They were met by Italian}
PRESSURE IS ON | ~ MOUNTBATTEN;
Indian Economic Situation -|s-Thorn_in_Side of Asiatic Chief.
statesmanship. The political issues center around
I ue a e three main subjects: The China war,
theater led by Generalissimo Chiang
that the Germans wouldn't have Kai-shek, the southwest Pacific any compunction as to how they|theater under Gen. Douglas Macentered the city than a serious), thyr and the domestic situation
—ghelling,” a refugee said. - A second agreeemnt between the A) 1and the Ge
German embassy, the telephone exand one of the two Rome
headquarters are to be established
|initially in New Delhi and India
naturally is a primary base of operations,, The gravest complication to Mountbatten’s command is the
3% will be in the position of ofganizing a big offensive drive and on India for huge supmanpower at a moment
Cr
OVERSEA
g| Horne, who lived here’ for the
BLOOD PLASMA
4
2 Ey
Physicians at the Indiana
1500 Expected 94th Ann
from internes to the state's oldest practicing physicians, convened here today to learn more about medical problems on the home {front and the battle fields at the 94th annual meeting of the Indiana State Medi-
through Thursday. at the Claypool hotel. : Indiana’s oldest practicing physiclan, Dr. W. T. Lawson of Danville,
jury for failure to notify his draft board of change of address and de-
last two years as Willard McDonald, will be brought before U. 8. Commissioner Howard Young tomorrow, who will bind him over to Federal Judge Robert C. Baltzell for removal to North Carolina, where the case will be tried. He has been held here under $1000 bond pending the grand jury action.
can airmen receive when in combat. | Meld service at the assoclation meeting. avacuation nurses, L& Mary Anne -Sauers and.
Hundreds of medical men, ranging
“Gaunt
to Attend
ual Convention
Features of today’s exhibits include lectures by Howard Carter, secretary of the council on physical therapy, on “How the Hearing Ald Works.” : Mr. Carter will explain and demonstrate the various hearing devices for deafened persons. Tomorrow's sessions will feature Adm, Dallas G. Sutton, East coast inspector of all medical activities, who ‘will speak on “Navy Medical Services in Combat” at 9:30 a. m. Cmdr. John F. Luten, assistant district medical officer at Great Lakes, Ill, will speak on “Battle Casualties With Special Reference to the Use of Sulfonamides” at 11
a m. Approximately 1500 doctors and medical representatives are expected to attend. :
Two-Wife Amnesia Victim Indicted as Draft Dodger
Horne claims a complete lapse of memory since August, 1941. At that time he says a stranger with whom he was-riding in a car In Florida gave him a sealed envelope which said “Do not open except in case of emergency or death.” He then came to Indianapolis, took the name of Willard McDonald, secured femployment, and married. Recently he and his wife; overpowered by curiosity, opened the envelope which revealed that he was Ivey Willard Horne, whose wife lived in Cumberland county, N. C. Mrs. McDonald immediately left for North Carolina to investigate and shortly afterward a warrant for Horne’s arrest on the selective service charge arrived here.
PROJECT GROWS
Inaugurated by Red Cross Two Years Ago, Service: - Meets War's Demands.
Two years ago this month the Indianapolis Red Cross chapter a small room in the Chamber of Ls r 9 iildi = ea
§88 af:
X |
22 1 ge
iE20 lt §
i 5
li]
I 2
: a
a
GRANT. MONEY FOR
They Ought to Be | Upon White River
PORTLAND, Ore., Sept. 28 (U. P.).~Ten days ago it seemed to be a good idea. But today, with i ‘a-decided touch of fall in the air,
{ seven men on a raft in the Wil-
liamette river wondered if they would be frozen out of their resolve to inhabit the raft until Oregon's third war bond drive goes over the top. . [| “Well do it,” Leader F. G. to chip the ice off us when we're through.” Six shipyard workers and a Y. M. C. A swimmer are castaways, 65 feet off regulation maritime raft emergency. provisions. jdays they have lived on the
,
with For
$104,000,000 mark in the war
'} drive. So far Oregon has ra
less than two-thirds of its quota. AND NEW, SEA MUSSELS!
7%
Brings ‘Gift’ on His ~ -50th Birthday.
| CHICAGO, Sept. 28 (U. P)~— Marshall Fleld III scribbles his {name on a receipt for a birthday present of between $70,000,000 and $75,000,000 today. In return for his sighature, Fleld {gains title to skyscrapers in Chi{eago, property on ‘Wall Street, and stocks in dosens of enterprises. He becomes one of the world's wealthiest men, but he does not ex_|pect the new fortune to change his life.
x
[have in the past,” he sald. “There may be. some ‘changes In
d on Receipt]
“#T expect to continue about as I| _
Dwight ©. Eisenhower to be a permanent major general, Tw Drum is commander of the 1st army and the eastern defense. command, and in that capacity
construction and labor already is a leutenant general.
the plant.
“STRAUSS ; SAYS: IT'S ONE DAY NEARER VICTOR
waiting until Oregon goes over its
investments, but otherwise things
are getting a chance to see the treatment Amerir forces medical workers set up an exhibit of medical ght are Li. Harry Deéetmer, Stout field, and two air
of Bowman field, Ky.
QUOTA IS NEAR IN BOND SALES
Last-Week Surge Chokes Bank, Postoffice Booths in. State.
Indiana quota Indiana sales 834, Marion county quota..$ 70,000, Marion county sales. ..$ 64,350,856
Marion county and Indiana citigens are making a last-week surge of bond buying which has choked registration in under-staffed banks, postoffices and other issuing agencles. It is expected that if Hoosiers continue at the rate they are going, they will be able to announce their quotas have been reached. when Secretary of the Treasury Henry Morgenthau Jr. makes his final third war loan speech Thursday
during the launching of an invasion barge at Evansville.
Banks Days Behind
Federal reserve banks, which eventually clear all sales, have re-
; during the Oct. 16 has been set as the final date. In the county, larger banks are from one to three days behind capacity in issuing bonds ordered and paid- for, William ©. Griffieth, county bond chairman, said.
Premier on Wednesday
The last activity of the drive will be the premiere of “Johnny Come Lately” tomorrow night at Loew's theater. Deadline for exchanging bond purchase receipt stubs at the booth in the theater has been set at midnight tonight. Booths at the Circle theater ran out of bonds dur. ing the week-end.’ A capacity house at the premiere will add almost $200,000 to the county's sales. Among purchase orders during the last few days were an increasing number of $500 “Gen. Clark” bonds.
CONFESSED SPIES
Ernest'\F. D. H, Lehmitz and Erwin
HERE IS THE TRAFFIC RECORD : FATALITIES City Total as SN sevens «1
wana. srvssanen
MORTGAGE FUNDS|Zui’ soci;
NT
"IN INDIANAPOLIS
GET PRISON TERMS
Total precipitation since Jan. +A Deficiency since Jan. 1..
will be the same.” Accustomed to Wealth
Field is able to take the inheritance from his grandfather in stride
{because he has been accustomed to
wealth since birth, And five years ago he received $46,000000 in accumulated income from the estate of the first Marshall Field, who was Chicago's merchant prince at the turn-of the century. The occasion for today’s presenta tion was the present Marshall Field's 50th birthday. When he died in 1908, the first Marshall Field left a will which provided that, except for minor payments to the heirs at certain intervals, the bulk of his estate should be held ‘Intact In a trust fund until his grandsons, Marshall III and Henry, reached the age of 50, Henry died in 1017, leaving Marshall III as sole heir, A unique feature of the will was that the estate kept its earnings and reinvested them to make more earnings. To Fortune Increases
The agency for perpetuating the merchant's wealth was the Marshall Field estate, an impersonal but
which the original Field retained his influence in Chicago's business life for 37 years after his death, The estate not only kept Field's fostune intact but increased it from approximate worth of $56,000,000 t his death to well -over $100,000,000. At 50, the present Marshall Field is trim, tanned, and greying at the temples. : = His chief interests are his newspapers, the Chicago Sun and New York's PM. He is editor of the Bun and works at the job industriously. The staff which has operated the Field estate will be retained to di-
nearly all of his time to the news No Change in Papers “There will be no change in the
{operation of the newspapers,” Feld
said, “because I always have financed out of my own pocket any-
Nor does He hive any“ifamiédiate plans for buying or starting other In spite of his inherited wealth, Field retains his grandfather's respect for profits. Profit was what he had in mind when he started the newspapers, he said, and he expects them to be a “sound investment.”
HEARINGS TO START ON ALLOTMENT HIKE
WASHINGTON, Sept. 28 (U.P). ~The house military affairs come mittee voted today to start hearings
ances to dependents of servicemen. Maj. Gen. Miller G. White, assist-
personnel, will be the first witness.
OFFICIAL WEATHER
eB Weather Buren . Alj:Dats in Central War Time
Precipits hrs. ending 7:30 a. m. . I preciptint + iid 28.80 The following table shows the temperature in other cities: 4
tow 54 » 45 “» 51 48
54 58 ki 58 Lod 86 a 60 50 60 55 50
. Wayne Indianapolis
(eity) ... Kansas City, oo»
Henry Bruce Yates, 21, Freeman aro r, Ind.; Jessie Lee Gregory,
ire
Central.
powerful financial‘ glant through}
rect his holdings while he devotes]
ant chief of staff in ‘charge 6f army |-
BURP 6188 (hunted ov 6188--F
“
THE MAN WHO HAS A 6000 SUT CNMN—
by "good" —meaning something that wears a well of a long time— something that Fits—that holds up in hard servico— - something that doesn't cost too much money—finds a WEARINGTON TWIST or WORSTED SUIT his best buy!
“YOU'LL BE BETTER SATISFIED WITHA
is not a matter of opinion or a matter of judgments
it's a matter of fact It's been proven so many thousands of times=in the service of so many thousands of men—that it = cannot be doubted,
WEARington— (“See What I Moan”) E
sean outstanding featured group at '
