Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 7 October 1943 — Page 2
Mrs. Mary Wallick Butler, widow of John A. Butler, former Indian ** apolis banker, died last night at her home at 946 N. Meridian st.
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"ROOSEVELT AGAIN. HENDERSON SAYS
PROMISE ‘FREE’
Lindbergh kidnaping
upon conviction, if government established that Stoll was injured during the .- moduction. She signed an affidavit Tuesday, saying Robinson had struck her with an iron pipe and her
also! for servicemen in Indianapolis, Franklin,
ILIPPINES OCT, 1422 mises of records and er.
$100,000. at |,.;0 a friend at the post hospital.
125, Jasper, Als.
detained at the post for question-
he held as witnesses rather than suspects in the murder of Lt. Cheney, whose brutally beaten -body was found by a 10-year-old child late | Tuesday after it had lain for 18 hours in a clearing close to a busy thoroughfare,
Visited at Hospital
Investigation revealed, meanwhile, that Lt. Cheney left the post Monday night about 9 o'clock after vis-
At the gate she is reported to have
Will Whip Hitler Quick,
: G HOME FRONT EFFORT Senators Beliee.
Ty UNITED raEss | WASHINGTON, Oct. 7 (U. P).—| Police Chief Fred Searls said of- | Premier Hideki Tojo, acknowl- rhs can deliver the decisive Cers were “turning the town upside allied offensive in allies v this youl 1 down” in an effort to ascertain what 17." has called for an increased to
Tojo told 240 newly appointed |expectedly in 1043, a senate military ve
affairs subcommittee reported today
more attention for the Pacific
divert ships from the Eurocarea now,” it said, “would our greatest offensive in . It. would prolong the war and cost innumerable lives.”
U-Boat Sinkings Decrease
The United States has 16,000,000 jtons and her allies 50,000,000 toms, | but there are not enough { to support simultaneous suoffensives in all theaters. military use of shipping, place the 5,000,000 overseas six months ahead of of 1044 schedule, the comid. :
i
TILE HAIL Z
g Es
cargo in one year—enough to equip 1500000 more troops in the! European
ARMY FUN PLANS
Bringing the organization's total contributions for entertainment of service men to $500, the grand tem- | ple of the Pythian Sisters of Indi. ana added $100 to the fund yester- | day at the opening session of the | 85th annual convention in the During the last year the 135 tem. ples of the organization have contributed money for snertattument
! Seymour and . New officers who will be installed | today are Mrs. Mary Burgess, New | Market, grand chief; Mrs. Madge Robertson, Salem, past grand chief; Miss Johanna Dickman, Shelbyville,
Mrs. Alma Meyers,
) Warsaw, grand outer guard; Mrs. bond were worked out. He pleaded Nellie Wallace, Frankfort, grand not guilty before U. 8. Co
trustee, and Mrs. Edna Boughman,
Kokonto, state press correspondent. day. ~~
eee AUTO DEATH ‘ACCIDENTAL
—laGrange County Deputy Cor. oner Harley PF. Flannigan today
LaGrange, who was killed instantly |
yesterday when the automobile he Was driving eareened into a tree.
thought it safe for her to walk the OPPOSE DIVISION 25m 2 disclosed, told her to use her own OF U. S. FLEET iene 1 ¥ Authorities said Lt. Cheney was
Concentration in Atlantic|a salad of pess shortly before her
they concentrate shipping in the|ggiaq Atlantic and otherwise make the! Both police and the army were
for { of the 3,000,000 at a loss for a motive, An autopsy Tokyo fadio sald in » broad. [08 HY ue © acquired un. [showed that Lt. Cheney had not
It vigorously opposed Sividing shipping strength. equally ween the
ir PROTESTS SLASH IN
|nesium division, who wrote Zo-|] rE een. Ye
record new 1 allies this year a “windfall” of cumulated our stockpile objective more : tered
sald. In military terms, it explained,| Zonarich reviewed the achieve. that means 9,000,000 extra tons of ment of the Arkansas miners in
theater. © |100,000 tons in August, 1941, toll
IPYTHIAN SISTERS AID
a hearing Oct. 15 on Proceedings to
the first world war, Gutreich was LAGRANGE, Ind, Oct. 7 (U. P). naturalized in 1920. He was for several years editor of the Kansas
City Presse, a German language returned a verdict of accidental newspaper. -
death for Carlos C. Marchand, 20,!
asked a military policeman if he
The military policeman, inquiry
slain shortly before midnight. They said a medical report that she ate
Capt. E. E Seiler, public relstions officer at the army alr force technical training post where the | brunet WAC was disclosed only that several have been
indicated that they arei]
death offers the only clue to her movements during the. intervening! three hours;
Motive Is Mystery I
i | restaurants may have served bt |
been raped. Seven dollars found In| her purse indicated that robbery | «|was not the motive. |
MINING OF BAUXITE
NEW KENSINGTON, Pa. Oct. 7. {(U. P)~Nick Zonarch, president {of the C, I. O. Aluminum Workers | lot America, today denounced an jorder of the war production board | reducing bauxite production. in| Arkansas, and said he would tell his union members to continue to, “get out the bauxite” from which | aluminum is made, Zonarich's protest was contained in a letter to Arthur H. Bunker; of the WPB aluminum and mag-~
order, that “not only ha¥e we acof: -2,000000 tons but: fortunately
the shipping situation appears to have substantially improved.”
Increasing, at the government's request, production of bauxite from
700,000 tons in August, 1943. Regarding the WPB order to the Republic Mining and Manufacture ing Co. to reduce production, Zonarich asked if Bunker's explanation meant that “we have such an abundance of shipping that we! can afford to import bauxite in. | stead of mining it here.” |
EX-CONSUL, INDICTED, MAKES $5000 BOND
KANSAS CITY, Mo, Oct, 7 (U. P.) —Hermann Gastreich, 48, former German vice consul here, yesterday made $5000 bond for release pending
remove him to Newark, N. J., where he was indicted Monday on a charge
of being an unregistered Nazi propaganda agent. Gastreich, held last night in the county . jail, spent the morning in the federal building as details of the
er Charles H. Thompson late Tuyes-
A captain In the German army in
EE ———————————————
JAP DRIVE HALTED, CHINESE HIT FOE
CHUNGKING, Oct. T (U. P).—
Chinese forces have halted a largescale Japanese drive against poten- || Hal allied bombing bases in east-
of the youths who ince .on Oct. 4, the Was arrestéd ab his home on Wash- | gisciosed attacking from three di. ington bivd, Both boys arrested said | rections a column 3 har ther pid ow the other two) tempting to drive westward from The youth arrested today said the otitb 1 admitted stealing four cars in three 544 DIE, TOKYO SAYS weeks for & thrill and the other} . By UNITED PRESS admitted stealing two. They said Tokyo radio said today that a The car they wrecked had been 1 more than a week ago,
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