Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 3 November 1943 — Page 9
Will Face Induction, Officials Promise. work: is his hobby, He played| Continued From Page One)
baseball and basketball in college or, if they are capable, then they! ys are past, In his spare certainly ‘are not sincere: in their tes articles for religious actions” «ipublications, reads biographies and/| Col. Hitehooek stronglf defended |. =the best fiction. | headquarters on this point. Active in the Scottish Rite, in| “It very definitely is not true, September he received the honar- | that there is insincerity on the part ary 33d degree in Masonry. He of officers in our headquarters” he was grand chaplain of Indiana's said. “You'll find us believing that
Masonic grand lodge for three you re holiest and that business Ja
1 shought.""
Pvt, Baker, 20, enlisted in the arbor. He
and sisters who live in Indians
apolis, and a brother, Pvt. gerald
& Baker, stationed 4 Stockton, L : . » »
LT, HENRY L. AYRES, fighter pilot with the U. 8 army alr forces, is a prisoner of Germany Sollawing action over Europe in y. . The son of Mr, and Mrs, Henry
honest in .asking defermenta. Ne, Lee Ayres.-1837 Nowland ave, he
“church, the |haven's time to be otherwise. You e new preacher. He will have three ® change on any replacement {ministers on his staff and the en. Schedule and we'll be glad to = tire church work will be under his | oy aipeiton pointed out, tn)
idance. {BY answer to charges by board mem-
He succeeds Dr. ve, minent 8p x. Merion Ries {bers that local plants are hoarding
died in May, and looks forward
‘We'rg Part of wMC “We're a part of WMC,” he said. | “Now whom are we to believe?” M. L. McManus, Board 3 chalr-
OL WHILE WOMEN PRAY LONDON, Nov, 3 (U. P) ~The! jarose from i of most emGermans executed 32 Polish men] | ployers to ‘sell headquarters at the town of Wolbrom on Oct. 14, lon the need of deferring-men. nine of them; while their women-| “I don't think you should-take folk, on hes of the Nazis, prayed the personnel director's word for in a church within earshot, Polish it,” he said, “He's looking out for sources said today. = [Bimselr I think you should go out! ; cand talk to the next-door neighbor.
the thotght that the chief trouble
{You may-not-have enough men. to
ido that, of course, but there are|
ways and means of finding out.” He told of a replacement schedule deferring a man as a chemist who was not being used in that type of a job in the war plant, Col. Hitchcock told the board members that absolutely no attention should be paid to anonymous letters, At the outset of the meeting, John Ferree, Board 8 chairman, who presided, “declared that there was ne revolt among local board members, | that they were patriotic and were
| going to stay on their jobs.
“We have to listen to the general
ot Jou u teslly ws ant 4 a JDargain-tt you're { publie,”- he said. “And every time
foo ge the suit real t you patie investigate these values mow! You'll
be amazed with the savings! : , 8 good. _“We local board members have been lied to so much that we don't believe anything we're told or see in | print. There must be mistakes in
schedules—state head. |
OPEN SATURDAY NIGHT ! "TIL » O'CLOCK
Places. Any. Garment.)
in Our Layaway! We BR WASHINGTON ST.
well as us,”
ane on any Tomson
Clergyman or, that the WMC had declared, [this a a critical labor shortage area.
niin, t told the state draft officers
| husband of Mrs.
we go down the street we get com- | plaints and lots of tips that are]
replacement quarters could have been Ned to » hy
was reported ‘missing in ae July 28° A War department tele gram to his parents yesterday said that he Imd recovered from ‘wounds received when eaptured
and gave his dares at the prison | camp.
Lt. Ayres enlisted in the RAF and first served with the Eagle
squadron before transfering to the |
“1 U. 8.°%ir forces in September, 1042. | | group gunnery
He went overseas last January, The 23-year-old pilot is a graduate of Tech high school and ate tended Purdue university. » J » T. SGT. JOHN I. REICHWEIN, ( ary Reichwein, 3116 W, North st, was officially
S ported A prisoner of war today by the war department. A previ | ad been sent to his |
ous report. wife that h a in.a German prison camp. S R. Englert, son of John P Englert, Monticello, interned in Germany,
and 8. Sgt. Clarence E. LaBoys.| Pacific area, |
teaux, son of Dan H. LaBoyleaux, Newcastle, interned in Italy, # r -
Killed
them from Indianapolis, were Killed in action in the European “and Mediterranean areas The war department today eon firmed the previous report that 2d Lt. John P, Ragsdale Jr. son of John P. Ragsdale, 88 Whittier pl, was killed in the European theater.
Other - casualties are 8 Sgt. |
"Charles T, Daniels, brother of Miss Elizabeth Daniels; Evansville, killed in the European area, and T. Sgt. Paul H. Buck, son of Mrs. Lola Buck, Carlisle, in the Medi. terranenn rome: ir
“Other prisoners are’ “tat Lt. Paul i
| which. Capt. | played ®.major role in Gen, Mac- - t inate _ THREE INDIANA" men, one of Arthurs, Secordinaieg. sir | anese, | bombers attacking enemy installa + “tions; “eseorting: transport planes’ | “flying troops and supplies to fore | ward areas, interception and ite tack missions against enemy bomb-
Lt. Henry L. Ayres Jr... . prisoner A
of war in (®rmany, ’ Honored
CAPT. EUGENE- H, WAHL, commander at Victoria, Tex.. has been awarded the distinguished flying cross for extraordinary achievement while | participating in 50 operational flight missions in: the southwest Pacific, Capt. Wahl, whe was in the southwest Pacific 11 months, is the son of Mr. and Mrs. G. A. Wahl, 983 Hervey st, He also has the silver star medal, the purple
heart andthe air-medal.
Award of the flying cross was announced by Lt. Gen, George |
{| ©. Kenney, commander of the al-
lied air forces in the southwest
“The 50 operational flights In Wahl participated
land and sea ‘offeniive against the JapThey included escorting
ers and seros and patrol and re connaissance flights, In the course
bombing attacks wers made from dangerously low altitudes, destroy.
| ing and damaging enemy installa. { tions and equipment,
Capt. Wahl was graduated from Manual high school and Wabash
t college:
Yanks Lando on. = Hoar Siained Sands of Bougainville Isle | S$] 4
(Continued From Page One)
of South Pacific ~ amphibious |
| forces, and-they carried out Song +
orders well, We came up from the south | last night, screened by Ameriean
planes and warships, In
tere mine cri. A las bo reminded is tin i
these boats were thousands of men, who handled American weapons at Guadalcanal and as | long ago as Nicaragus.and Shanghat. Toughened by months of jungle training, they quietly polished long slick bayonets and oiled | thett rifles for the work ahead. » ¥ a
THE STARS shone brightly in. a moonless night sky when U, 8. . destroyers started bombarding the coast, slowly at first, then in a swelling crescendo to smash en emy batteries, machine-gun nests and a bivouac area near Bure. toni village, 400 yards behind the beach. Shells screamed over us as we clambered down a.45-foot rope ladder into landing craft to set out for Torokina point, toughest spot on the three-mile beachhead, As we crouched, the coxswain sang out to his gunners, “Open got when you spot the enemy.” We were 500 ‘yards offshore
droned up and let loose oh the beach. Great homb bursts rocked our boat. " “Oh, Lord, are we givin’ 'em hell,” the coxswain. yelleds.exultantly. . . » g A HIDDEN JAPANESE shore
‘up-with-everything you've |-
“Their machine-guns ‘did say.
a word to us until we got in front of them,” Sgt. Harold Gerlach of Los: Angeles said later.
Many Other Grimes, Russians Insist.
‘(Continued From Page One) tripartite agreemgiit the crininals
| { | i i
{will be brought back to stand trial
under the laws of the countries where their crimes were committed, There has been. a preview—the Krasnodar trials last July, where eight were hanged and three given long terms In prison.” ad 1 stopped at bne page i “German killing methods.” Here Dr. Nikolai Burdenke of the| Societ - Academy of Sciences v
{quoted on personal investigations i rel
{ children of all ages clutched In | dying embrace by their murdered mothers.” Burdenke alleged. “The | Germans chose out - of - the - way [woods and gullies for their execus | tion grounds. At Donbas they flung {victims by the thousands into the | mines, Our investigations in huns {dreds of towns and villages brought lua to the conclusion that shooting | ™ the ‘back of the head was so
er > ap V1 Rel IY
“I've seen innumerable bodies otf hat
2 You are the perton: behind he must produce more “and better every day. Te do vi your Vion be kept up to par. Have your — today—it takes but a few il to make sure that you sre sok ying time by. bed vision.
Dr. J. W. Farris Dr. S. B.:Merrick EYES EXAMINED GLASSES ON CREDIT
1. Charge FOR CREDIT Al KAYS.
|
WETTER ON 4 Sa I
| typical As to be called ‘the Cerman, Att
| method.” | “What ean Germany ack " 1 | persisted to the Russian spokesman |
Army Men Are Guilty
“1 think Germany j well the general
knows very outlines her
| retribution will take,” the spokess |
man replied. “The main Soviet points might be summarized: The | great mass of Germans will be re- | sponsible for restitution of war damages, bug since it is impractical to bring. the Reich's millions to trial, eriminal responsibility must be broken down. The rank and file of soldiers who carry out. looting or murder, whether independently: or under orders of sipertors, heverthe-
less are responsible persanally for|
thei misdeeds. Hitler, his ministers, the Nas party leaders and the
army command all are guilty of
grievous violations of international, of these operations, strafing and jaw and these will be tried. The, financiers who made Hitlerism pos- |
sible will be considered accessofies, “All Germans who exploited labor {and forced Russians into slavery, (all Germans who “have received goods known to have been stolen [duos Russians, ®iso have résponsi= bility. ‘This is a monumental ist fou records have been kept faithjfuy for the day of reckoning.”
WEEK § av: Payment 45
“Then 75 .
yards from the beach we caught
hell.” . ¥ ”
A HALF HOUR later our ship | batteries 300 yards' offshore went |
into action against 10 to 12 Japanese divebombers, them go down In flames, failed to scoré on the vessels, That was five hours ago. Now
1 sew two of | They |
reports from inland say 60 Jap. |
anese have died. Many more will
die before night.” The capture of |
the beachhead wasn't cheap but losses were comparatively moderate, The marines are 600 yards me land, working toward the northe west, In that direction, 50 miles away, lies Buin, where some 35,000 enemy troops may be concen-
trated. But the beachhead is firm | and it is alive with jeeps, trucks |
and tractors put ashore from |
landing boat ramps. The last | phase of the Solomons campaign -| 1 on.
18 N. Illinois St.
| 3 Claypoal Retell Ridg,
“He Reduces His Cleaning Bills With
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‘NG white or pastel garments included)
a ll
No extra sharge ; for Plok-Up and 0W3 S00TTY SQUIRREL CLEANING
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Have a “Coke”= Good winds have blown you here.
—_ AN \} ¥
4 trol plicsty Whto Coca-Coln fs on Bands you Sad Wesmeming Hisndships. Es for our fighting men. China knew Coca-Cola from Tientsin to Shanghai, from Hong Kong to Tsinguo. To Chinese and Yank alike, How # “Cole” are wel- [05 iy come words. They belong wih friendliness 464 freedom. Frosh Aaas o the
