Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 6 October 1943 — Page 13

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were scheduled to be made in fed=| eral court today. James D. C. Murray, counsel for. the defendants, including John Ros

selli, an army private and former

said many Hollywood notables be called to testify. . ; Producers to Testify They will include, he said, Louis B, Mayer and A] and Harry Warner, Boris Kostelanetz, ‘special assistant attorney general indicated. that George E Browne, former union president, and his aide, Willie Bioff, both serving prison sentences for a shake-down of the movie in-

The men are accused of helping Browne and Bioff extort $1,000,000 from the industry, and of sharing in the diversion of $1,500,000 of a levy on union members,

Chicago Men Named

‘ ‘The Chicago members, identified as members of a syndicate which took over when Al Capone was sent to prison, are: Louis (Little New York) Campagna, alias Lefty Louis Cook, a former Capone bodyguard; Paul De Lucia, alias Paul Ricca; Phil D'Andrea, former Capone bodyguard, head of the Italo-American national union and publisher of I’'Italia, a Chicago newspaper; Francis (The Immune) Martitote, alias Diamond, a brother-in-law of Capone; Ralph Pierce, another Capone aide, and Charles (Cherry Nose Joe) Gioe, Rosselli was west coast representative of the alleged syndicate before his army induction, the government charges. + Another defendant, Frank (The Enforcer) Nitti, brother-in-law of Capone, killed himse)f March 19 when the indictment charging conspiracy and violation of the anti. racketeering law was disclosed,

U, S. INDICTS 27 IN ‘NAZI CONSPIRACY

WASHINGTON, Oct. 6 (U. P.).— The German-American Vocational League, Inc, one of its subsidiaries, and 27 ‘officers and members were indicted yesterday by a Newark, N.

| J. federal grand jury on charges of| conspiring to act as Naz agents ay without notifying the state and jus-|

tice departments, Attorney General Prancis Biddle announced here, The indictment, based on a na-tion-wide investigation by the federal bureau of investigation, said the defendants served Germany by spreading propaganda designed to promote acceptance 6f Nazism in this country and to keep America out of the war. The indictment charged that the league, also known as DAB (Deutsch - Amerikanische « Berufsgemeinschaft), with headquar{ters in New York and branches in 1 principal cities, regularly used {various German consulates to communicate in code with its German {afliate, the German: labor front. The league also worked closely with the Nazi party from January, 1933, to January, 1042, the period covered by the. indictment, it was charged. : Three of the individuals are now | In Germany. Of those in this coun- { try, one'is in the army, another in jail, two have been interned as dangerous alien enemies, and four have been excluded from coastal defense areas by the army.

REPORT DETROIT'S | MAYOR LOSING RACE.

DETROIT, Oct. 6 (U. P).—Un-

PA soon will fix ceiling prices rethe cost of 13 fresh vege-

| will be set: later.

- Included in the first list probably will be tomatoes, peas, snap beans,

Or

based on the airfield here, screamed down over this palm-bordered atoll, through skies bathed with moonlight, a 22-year-old marine, Howard Barling dived from his M-shaped foxhole. Barling, a former General

prices Motors timekeeper in Pontiac, Mich,

[FOUR AWARDS AWAIT

YOUNG FARM WINNERS

Youthful Indiana farmers, taking part in the scholarship program of the National Junior Vegetable Growers’ association, now may com-

had dug the foxhole, with his fel. low marines, into coral rock. Somebody yelled: “Here they come.” He was right. : One bomb hit Barling’s. “fale,” which is Samoan, for hut, Another hit directly into the foxhole. “I felt the concussion,” says Barling. "Then I felt dirt come pouring over me.” : Even as he struggled up from the

pete for four awards totaling $100/dirt, Barling: remembered having for outstanding achievement in last seen Meld Music Sgt. Chester

vegetable canning.

Woodward, of Springfield, Mass,

Awards of $25 each will be based beside him in the trench,

ron quantity and quality of vege-

Nothing now was visible of Wood-

tables canned: this yqear. The pro- ward but his helmet,

{gram was announced by Roscoe

“1 dug his face free so that he

| Praser, extension specialist in vege- could see and breathe. His poncho

table crops at Purdue university.

and gasoline, which had been burn- | patrick

ing, fissed warningly.

Woodward dropped. The bomber |der was gravel

blew up, wiping out everything in |got ~ he said and his betra;

sight. j Both men plunged into a tiny swamp in the middle of the atoll and cooled their burning bodies. Then they started back. They found the man they had been look ing for, erying: “Get me out of here” They hauled him free and threw three pails of water on him, but he kept on crying “Get me out of here.” Tech. Sgt. Lynn Bonda, of Guyton, Ga, and Huntingdon, Tenn. led” the shocked marine to an ald station, permitting Barling and Woodward to continue the excavation for other comrades. Next they found Calvin Kilpatrick, North Quincy, Mass, who had been engaged in distilling drinking water from the sea when the blast came and buried him to the knees.

latin held him down. I dug away'They helped him free himself,

J

Three men hauled hind sandbags. From the burning airplane, M caliber machine gun shells were thudding and spitting against the sandbags. Suddenly another “fale” blew up and turned into a bonfire, Barling says: “Woodie decided it was too hob to continue there, He changed his mind about bandaging Sleider, and loaded him on his back. I got a flat board—think It was a door blown off a ‘fale, and we put Slel« der on that” Sleider, who had been a circus freak, specialising in grotesque exe pressions and who had been a fire eater and also a human pin cushion, struggled for a long time in the hospital against his wounds, bus finally died,

e, was among the fghier and| {op Zero Nghters in 8 ‘vecers rune) ning battle y :

he %

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