Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 25 November 1943 — Page 9
Tan ee | By soRED P).~ 5 a io } dla SYA AAR RAR + a Te sywiond Hf. Wallace uted 53 Italian | 10.3 : . : Ll State Adds $10,000,000 t0!came home this month wearing the , in reprisal for 3D Jouth, may a dal leaders Dave charged] ” = ; . cy blue of the navy and the khaki of German soldier ; : scour. | Sme socla) idadess | _ Founded South Side ‘Estimates ‘Made by [the army . .. and then the story shot of another in an or Beetta dent Sha sore. efart. is etn 9 > ; of his sea adventures was no longer |Other an Hallas girl, . | of the Mdisnapolis ‘Chuarens ius on, SYIg (hit stignes Cleaning Plant. Irma Piel . County Boards. a secret. until i today. , & private agency, joined Mr. children commit ‘than ri: After going to three Shies, That | sinking. a Cafaro, daugh= j Markey in the sonsiusion | Wat ing why they committed them. Alex 8. Darko, head of Darko & and Increases of $10,000000 in the anapolla. Miwa: hit “By that American siti : Waried social at "serviee m - Ask Permission to Wed - Sons cleaning establishment, died Glaylle "| valuation of eight Indiana corpora- kee, Wis, and gone,” he D lived at panded ‘hoes with ohldren The young mother in the city's/this at his home, 1050 Nel- « |tions, including a $7,000,000 boost Cleveland, O, the | an dragged from a ° proper enlightenment on the prob-|latest murder case formerly lived in|son st. He was 72. Rumford in the General Electric conipany at Jaye go sadlor lem of life Beech Grove with her father and| ao. porko both in H [nally found. Tia out cution, but died of life. step-mother.. Her mother dled sev- .-Darko was born in Hungary «+ + their Pt. Wayne, have been made by the, other, Mrs. After the safiors the death line ] There 4 stk A eral years ago. Oct. 20, 1871, and had lived in In- state board of tax commissioners,/Alice Tuggle, thelr food and most of eep quarry, the : Sass ne too late to help”| Investigation revealed. that Miss dianapolis for 36 years, For a num- achievement [Board Chairman . Charles Bedweli whom he had supply, despite a ried out the mass Mrs. Nicholson said Long asked her father for his per-| ber of years he was a tailor at the | records | {sald today. jcome home 0 tive ounces a day, a tanker 3 AES . The board increased the valua- see, s of 10, with a ission} \0 get JAHIed with she Wi. B. Block Co. them up 22 miles from the ar. The bodies Must Redouble Efforts first started having dates with the] Fourteen years ago he founded a speak for tions over assessments set by county| Mrs. Tuggle, coast. It took them to arty, after which rr qualified to|Lowe youth but that he refused and [cleaning and tailoring business on| - review boards. who lives “at 816 | port fety. up with mines, Sp ps wren? material as-|she er Dah Up Tie blocs | Ue Both we Temata, At Ft. Wayne, the local valuation |N. Delaware SL. Seaman Wallace Pie wat. pot. the last wo s under tons of Ve, given counse again with him or anyone else. Services will be held at 1:30 p. m. of $5,584,105 for the General Elec- had ‘gone to {to see of that tanker, ccording to the " sistance to this boy and girl Whoi™y oy we also said he had asked Saturday in the J. C. Wilson funeral tric plant was raised to $12,6{3850. (Cleveland on a visit. Seaman Wal- | Wallace. said. “T was CECE : found their troubles so insurmount-|j.:. mother permission to get mar-|home. Burial will be in Crown Hill. ‘Other increases: lace, finding his mother away from | right away to another ship and Ferien able that they took the lite of their ried but that she advised him against| Mr. Darko is survived by his wife, 8. F. Bowser Co, Pt. Wayne, In- home, thought she had gone. t,o" eumnad some 1500 miles AGED BY new-born bab: “doing anything that he would re- Mrs. Rosa Darko; two. daughters, creased $587.65, or from- $460.410 Milwaukee to visit relatives. After)... 0 of our rescue when APARNA LY “Many ro aftncles: have “seen |gret later.” Mrs. Margaret Gerdenich and Mrs, 10 $1,067,075. traveling’ {o the Badger State, Tel, ..oved in an open harbor. : VANDALS i maniy” young people safely through Social workers agree that al Ethel Goss; four sons, Laslo, Sam- : f meriean Steel Foundry ou East learried she was in Cleves | “During a Storm our port aneage Wigs last similar circumstances as those in|trained social worker should have uel, Louis and Charles: seven Glucago. $345 400, or Trom- $1,864,800 But - when a oy a Y Me hain broke and we began’ to boys which this boy and girl found them- |been assigned to help the girl read- | grandchildren, and a brother, Louis 2 : and Mrs. Tuggle noticed her son's (a1 the water there is in ights 10 the 1300 selves before their frantic decision |just herself following her mother’s Darko of Cleveland. Pullman Standard Car Manufac- | ‘mixed uniform, she became In- 14" we nad to drift right on § at, and to d ith their baby. That death and the subsequent remarriage | turing Co. La Porte, $573.60, ofquisitive and he could no longer |, poor shat same tanker! W detaced a dwell- 0 away > he r b y. hat AoE the Taber Lk {from $1,161,710 to $1,735,400. keep his naval battles a secret were banged WU she cordia st. She" wim i a > rena | YANK,’ U. -S. ARMY 4 | Exon Electric Co., Elkhart county, Set Adeilt Ne both ny sare tae n names of five The Couple's Story 2 Vv | 4. H C | b Wi $607,155, or from $190,380 to $796,535. ‘ ' ! : X 2 the light-break- used is very sad. | “At any rate the child should hav NEWSPAPER, CITED ersariie u inners, Ross Gear and Tool Co. Lafa-| Seaman Wallace, a veteran of peyas We - then proceded no arrests have | Smusly it 3s sbvigus that Me ie a th y ‘ a t ave NEW YORK, Nov. 25 (U, P.).—/ |yette, $303,815, or from $437,115 to|three months in the naval armed ¢ the good old U. & A. : " redouble our efforts protect ve) a e opportunity for proper en- ; : Ce «Bh P f Vi if tf Chi $740,930. guard, survived the torpedoing by | . Great Lakes Graduate ———— work with youth instead ‘of waiting lightenment on means of getting ad- The Saturday Review of Literature r epar e or I SI oO I cag go| National Homes, Inc. Lafayette a Nazi sub, spent 14 days adrift on| The husky, tanned sailor Be |vice for any kind of trouble,” de- announced today its award for “dis- Savike’ Riamtond 41 ici t of ‘Galle. is the daught ‘ $107,940, or from $289,510 to $397,450. (a lifeboat, was rescued by an Eng- been in, Colon, Panama, Suez clared Mr. Mark th tinguished service to American pub- aylie' Rumford and Irma Pieljeast of “Gaylle, e daughter of| The largest decrease was for the lish tanker and then experienced Capetown in his seven months : ware Coughs arkey of e- social guis! P! are going to Chicago Saturday.|Mr, and Mis. Edward O. Piel and {defense plant corporation at South a collision with the same tanker sea duty. 8
agencies. The couple's story in brief is:
from common colds They had been going together {steadily for more than a year and
That Hang On [that when they learned she was to
J Chronic al Rang may develop if 'become a mother “we were afraid to
our cough, chest cold, or acute bron itll anybody and we were scared Thitls is not treated and you cannot | afford to takea chance with anymedi- © death and didnt know What to
cine less potent than Creomulsion |d0.” which goes right to the seat of the | The girl wd working in a downJrouble to help loosen expel germ | town restaurant and one night last soothe and heal raw, tender, inflamed | t@ september she became ill while they bronchial mucous membranes. [were riding together after work. Sraomulsion Dieniis bogthwood He drove to a field off the road creosote by special process other south of Indianapolis and the baby It contains no narcotics. for coughs. | yas horn in the rear seat of the car. 0 matter how many medicines | “ ” you have tried, tell your druggist to . 1 Was: Seared “1 was scared and didn't know! hat to do,” the Lowe boy said. He [wrapped the baby in a coat and
sell you a bottle of Creomulsion with |. the inde ing you must like the |; .idrove Miss. Long to her: home. _He| | then satd- he drove out south’ of the
way it quickly allays the cough, per.mitting rest and sleep, or a to | city again and threw the baby into { White river.
) 5.38 have your money. back. You Can Fight, Too, | It was found the next day and sheriffs raced it. to the
Buy War Bonds - ER | deputy
couple. 4] “I thought the baby was dead,” ‘| said young Lowe. “So I didn't know {| what else to do with it. We were ¢| afraid to let anyone know about it.” ‘The grand jury charged: both of them with first degree murder on i evidence that the baby was alive = §| When born and that neithef of them attempted to provide medical aid to $ save its life.
ki giers, Nov. 25 (U. P.).—An unarmed C-47 transport bound for Naples { got lost, in soupy weather yesterday | and flew over:the Rome area for 404
minutes. Civitavecchia anti-air-craft guns punctured the trans-|- | port's wings, but the crew. landed safely in the Naples area.
THESE HOME
PLAN Ine =
taken by Dow's fellow marines.”
lishing” to the army weekly, Yank, and said it would also call Yank to the attention of the Pulitzer prize committee for a journalism award. the Saturday Review. ‘said; has been substi | tuted for “letters” the award because it comes closer to describing Yang's principal achievements. ‘“Yank's ‘potential dudience is as .llarge as the army itself’s the Saturday Review said: “It is Jpublished | weekly, with the customers strung’ out all over the world, from Trinidad to Australia, from Panama. to Kiska, from, London to Hawaii. The problem of geography alone calls for publishing magic on heretofore hardly contemplated, let alone. Attempted. - en
The word * “publishing,”
a scale
Marines Break - Into Print. Again
DES MOINES, Ia. Nov. 25 (U, P.). — Sixty-eight marines in a southwest Pacific unit asked forthis story. The request was, inclosed with money orders for $40.86 sent to Mrs. Harold Dow, 21, Des Moines. When someone took $16 from Mrs. Dow's purse, she wrote her husband, a marine sergeant, about At The sen. in Dow's unit, asked
4 hew miish pew sending |
home in his next letter. He told them $40.88, and -they matched the amount. The 69 contributors wrote Mrs. Dow: “We request -some publicity be giverr this letter in order that the thief -will be aware of the action
——
INDIANAPOLIS
Democratic Way of Life i
HISTORIC
B®
1S THE
Thankful on Thanksgiving! We, tos have much to be thankful for, Thankful for our Country. Thankful for our
ie. Thankful for the Patronage we have enjoyed. ‘Thankful for the many Loyal; Employees who help us- Serve You.
SOUTHWEST CORNER WASHINGTON &
HIGHWAY
—
1
in this. Repub-
ILLINOIS
ROUTE 0
.
‘in the title of
| WIFE SLAYER LOSES
{murder by a jury at Wampsville ‘J
_ |pound, a two-week supply, today. by
Behind this simple item are eight is at Butler on a scholarship won in| years of winning 4-H club blue {rural electrification last year. ribbons to prove their boasts of “we| A member of Zeta Tau Alphal can do almost anything around the sorority, she “fixes the lights at the| rouse.” {sorority house,” . ‘Gaylle, a senior at Warren Cen- el sé can. : tral high school, won the natiohali” And she has ‘won first place in Westinghouse 4-H rural -electiifica- | dress making contests for _eight tion contest, and Irma, a freshmanyvears Both girls. also have won| at Butler university and a Warren pjye ribbons in county an Central graduate, won the Spool contests for canning, Cotton Co. , clothing contest. As | rewards, they will go to the Natignal Club Congress in Chicago
| preparation, ‘room improvement. and |
Bend operated by Studebaker, where a local valuation of $7,620, 000 | was reduced to $6,901,960. Bedwell said that increases were |
because No one'y reflection of higher inventories tncle Sain's flee
loccasioned by war contracts
_ARMY PROMOTES HOOSIER WASHINGTON, Nov. 25 (U, P).|
d state ~The army annouticed today that morning baking, food | Maj. Paul G. Hykes, South Bend, {through the Indian ocean off Ma-
i Ind., has been promoted to the rank of lieutenant colonel,
| He enlisted in 1500 miles away. {kee. Sept. 17, 1042, and took He had lost nearly all his naval] {training at Great Lakes and (clothing when his ship went down, | Mississippi gunners’ school. Seaman Wallace 1s a member of | His stepfather, Clifford tL assigned to pro-iis in the army military police ‘tect American merchant ships from | islon at Camp . Atterbury and
‘enemy atr, sutface and ‘submarine | [brother, Elmer. Wallace, now |attack. . {school in Milwaukee, is waiting “I was on watch at 2:30 one | til he's ‘18 and can enlist in As we were ae navy,
Seaman Wallace is now ata \dagascar . when 1 was - knocked |Orle ans base, ready to be seit bi across the ship by the.-concussion to sea.
|: gardening.
Sunday through Dec. 1. Gaylle and Irma ave been friends for a long time, and their 4-H club careers almost parallel, ex: | cept Gaylle wants to be a dietitian, and Irma is majoring in music Gaylle, however, is in the high
. 1 school band-and orchestra-and plays: _—
the B flat clarinet. Irma is’ taking" piano and violin at Arthur Jordan conservatory of music. Gaylle lives on a 360-acre farm at 8202 E. 10th st. where she helps ther father, Samuel 8. Rumford, fix {electrical equipment and run the |farm, and helps her mother in doimestic duties, She helped set up electric chick brooders, temporary lights for ‘the lawn, and planned {the wiring for the barn and chicken . house. | “The only thing T can't fix are | those terrible plastic plugs,’ she | said. ” LJ) Irma, who lives shout two. miles
TE gr ae
"Claims OPA Ends | FDR Farmer Role
WASHINGTON, Nov. 2% (OU. PJ. = Rep. Hamilton Fish (R. N. Y.) complained to the house | this week that the “exactions of New Deal and OPA regimentation” had forced out of business two of his farmek-constityents, Franklin ¥. Roosevelt and Henry Morgenthau Jr. “In my district Pranklin D. Roosevelt of Hyde Park had to abandon claims of being a dirt farmer, due to the exactions of New Deal and OPA regimentation, and assume a .new title as forester or distributor of Christ= mas trees,” Fish said, “Fifteen miles away another constituent, Henry Morgenthau Jr., unable to cope with New Deal milk regulations and the OPA ceiling price on corn, sold his | large dairy herd, relinquished his title as a dirt farmer, and became a horticulturist.”
INDIANA YOUTH HELD ON KIDNAPING COUNT
CINCINNATI, Nov. 25 (U. P.).— A federdl-grand jury yesterday indicted Charles T. Lievers, 19-year-old Evansville, Ind., youth, on kidnaping charges in connection with the abduction of an Illinois salesman, Lievers was charged with abducting Charles T. Monroe, 31, of Western Springs; TI, when Monroe stopped on an Illinois highway to | pick up the youth who was hitchhiking. i Lievers, reported to be A.W. O:L. | from the Canadian army and] dressed in a Canadian uniform, was charged with driving Monroe to Cincinnati before releasing “him,
DEATH VOTE APPEAL
ALBANY, N. Y., Nov. 25 (U. P.). —The court of appeals yesterday ., unanimously confirmed the first-de-| gree murder conviction of Joseph | C. Mascari, for the slaying of his | wife, Rose O'Connell Mascaii. The court ‘set Jan. 3 as the new | | date for execution. Mascari, Watervliet truck driver, | was found guilty of first-degree !
last spring after the: body of the woman was taken from a ditch near | Canastota last December, where, police said, Mascari tossed it from his automobile. He was charged with beating the victim to death with 8 haminer.
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