Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 25 April 1944 — Page 13

lic over-cone | ary faults or urity regula= bove patriots. . ine the home

on

Dp, led by Sec event friction foreign policy jonal disunity, committee to i to share in » to American

eign relations

w consultative ..

icans and the

Barkley and rg, White and he West Coast -

executive-cone s, which is so

war and the -

Aprll 28. is being made -not the kind up bridges in ch more high= own as politie this way: e chats, since nder rationing President has ugar rations and has even tion would be t been able to

ng the ration turally, every President and nderful. The

refiners, shipe ers, canners, e¢ whole sugar orce the issue, to show thas on industrial tever the fige ir food admine ation still say 0 increase the

Rumor: There kpile than the he British are Rumor: Cuba ‘hich can't be ation won't ase p all rumors? that rationing election, when reat gift to the ote Mr. Roose PATS, to plant these P.

of sugar, now .

1941. consumpe

big sugar beet of speeches mn

, press confer rt, Sir Willlam n't building up lying sugar to under reverse

is a survey on n OPA by Else esident of the { a member of ttee. - Bunker's blessing to get ould: be ready ge the picture 10t. the European that stockpiles var relief, that great mistake, f the liberated inue rationing

politics, which tic variety.

| TUESDAY, APRIL 25, 194 —___

SAFETY GROUP | Refueate Talk T0 HEAR TIPTON

Cut in Industrial Accidents | To Be Discussed at

Dinner Today.

Lt. Col. Laurence B. Tipton, chief training advisor, U. 8. department of labor, will speak at the 6:30 p. m. dinner of the Industrial Safety club of the Chamber of Commerce at the Indianapolis Athletic club today. Col. Tipton's discussion of the "campaign In which management and labor will co-operate, under ‘the secretary of labor, to bring about ‘a 40

NAZI INTERNEE T0 SPEAK HERE

An eye-witness account of wartime Germany will be given partici-

field day at Butler university Saturday by Herbert G. King, 36-year-old Englishman and United Press war correspondent, George J. Rony A Nazi internee for 13 months, . A FUGITIVE from three dictatorships, George J. Rony, motion picture director-producer, will speak at 6:30 p. m. tomorrow in the Marott hotel before the Executives Club of Indianapolis. Born in Leningrad, Mr. Rony became interested in motion pictures when he helped produce a film in 1920 depicting hunger in the Volga region. Club officers are George K. Lilly, president; Walter L. Shirley, first vice president; F. E. Thornburgh, second vice president, and Earl H. Schmidt, secretarytreasurer,

journalism students and guests on “Inside the War” at the general assembly at 9 a. m. in Jordan hall. Mr, King's current tour marks his first visit to the United States. He

change of correspondents. Born in Great Britain, Mr. King for the past nine years has been ger of the foreign department of the London General Press and a member of the British United Press and the United Press in London and Paris,

Col. Tipton per cent reduction in the 2,500,000 industrial accidents that occurred in 1043, will conclude a full day of safety conferences.

Goal Set for Next Year

During this conference, plans are being made to set the Indiana goal in the national campaign for one million fewer industrial sevidents next year, Special guests at the dinner will be the agents and state Advisiy} committee of the national comm tee for the conservation of wis power in war industries, a 1043 industrial accidents, g.crip-. :

Others on Program

Other speakers on the field day | Progran) are: E. Orton,

bureau | ra

Indianapolis | of the Associated Press; | Fleming, counsel of the Hoosier State Press

writer of The | Stone, assistant director of safety for the Indianapolis Chamber of Commerce; Charles Weddle, news editor of The Times; Jari Fischer, make-up editor of the News:

FOR BOND DRIVE Victor Peterson. head of The Times

v holographic Separunent Ralph

imes; Mrs. Florence Herz

, TT um Thu a Fo roi tail advertising .salesman for a for an average of 15 days \ by Tr oops ihe News: Mrs. ‘Phoene Hudler, fs

each,” according to Charles D.| Mosier, assistant state chairman of | the national committee for the con- | servation of manpower in war in-| dustries and director of safety for|

of the North Side Topics; Miles Tiernan es managing editor of the Star,

Totaled $1,445,853 in

This District. {short general assembly {following the Indianapolis Chamber of Com-' Representatives of 30 Boy Scout conferences, Mrs. Rosamund Risser merce. | oops and Cub Scouts recently re- Jones. acting assistant professor of “The terrible thing about these! ceived war bond prizes for outstand- journalism at Butler, announced. fosses is that nine out of 10 indus-|ing bond sales in the fourth war em ———

trial accidents are definitely pre-|!0&n drive and commendation by! ventable.” George J. Marott and Eugene C. Pulliam, state chairman of the war

SUSPECTS HELD IN |" ‘Marois gave $750 in checks| GRIFFITH ROBBERY! for purchase of $1000 in bonds for |

| the 30 troops. The Scout sales dur-|

EAST CHICAGO, Ind, April 25! | ine the drive totaled $1.445.853 and (U. P)~Police said today a pl degra American woman is the biggest | Miss Helen Waltermath, cashier of The troops and their scoutmasters disappointment in America,” acthe Griffith Federal Savings and| receiving the awards ‘include the, COT4ing to Mary Weston, Belton | Loan Assn. identified Walter Dem-| following: 39, Bethany Lutheran stir » in BEE Ho ay in - browski, 29, as the bandit who hela) hurch. J. Wesley Brown; 78, Nor-| “eh, oY: y w wood Christian church, Glen Fp, London Star.

| the Indianapolis bureau of United Press.

American Women Termed Egoists

LONDON, April 25 (U. P)— With the exception of airplane hostesses and policewomen, “the’

Alvin ! Wray E.| 1 | Association; Wayne Guthrie, city editor ‘of the News; John Hiliman, editorial

Miss Weston writes that nowhere |

up the association last Friday and pingdiey; 42, Capitol Avenue Meth- |

escaped with $3288 in currency.

The officers said that they had obtained a confession from the!

{odist church, Grant J. Hays; Immanuel Evangelical formed, Arthur H. Dudley;

112}

and Re-| 28, Mead-|

has she found such self-proud, spoiled, talkative, and pseudo-in-tellectual women so engrossed in

themselves and their personal and

, i Chri : U. , prisoner. They also said they were lawn Christian, Harvey U. Gill, and domestic allaits 32 i Americ.

holding Staniey Levandusky, 32, as 126, Little Flower Catholic church, she driver of the car in which Dem- | Wade Van Slyke. browski escaped after the bold day-| Other troops receiving awards: | Mght robbery. They reported that!50, 60, 75, 51, 85, 121, 118, 120, 130,

PLAN THURSDAY MEETING

pants of the 11th annual journalism

Mr. King will address high school] .

die tramps’ 20% 97 Church Choirs fo Join in Music Festival Next Friday

)

Sponsor 600-Voi

Newton, director.

Some 600 voices from 27 Indianapolis church choirs will present a festival of choral music at 8 p. m. Friday in the Technical high

{school gymnasium under the. spon-

sorship of the Indianapolis Choir Directors association. Festival conductors will be Fred!

i

Contest awards will be made in a

Easy st.

ond son, |James Gillespie, is with the marines {in the South Pa-

NAVY VETERAN HAS

Joy C. Gillespie, machinist’s mate

and Robert Stranahan, night manager of | 1-c, and his family are well repre- |

sented in the army and navy. Machinist Gillespie has returned Boston, Mass., after visiting his wife, Mrs” Mabel Gillespie, 1808 °

His son, Pvt Herbert Gillespie, is stationed with the army in England, and a secPfc.

‘cific. Pvt. Albert

L. Teal,

{

| Gillespie was among the first

his son- J. C. Gillespie

lin-law, also is in the South Pacific! land his nephews, Sgt. Forrest W. {Stonebraker and Sgt. Sherman Gil!lespie, are in England. In the navy two years, Machinist to {land troops in Sicily and Italy. He, {was in the battle of Salerno from |

beginning to end. He made five,

i trips to Naples.

§ i

The veteran sailor also has been

{in North Africa, Engiand, Ireland!

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

‘Officers of the Indianapolis Choir Directors association sponsoring the music festival next Friday include (left to right) Ralph W. Wright and Charlotte Moore, directors, and George Frederick Holler, secretarytreasurer. Other officers are J. Russell Paxton, president, and George

ice Choral Fete

*

Iske, J. Russell Paxton, and George Frederick Holler. Soloists will include Mrs. Jane Johnson Burroughs, Mrs. Lowell Springer, George Newton, William Moon and Charles Hamilton. . Participating church choirs and their directors are: North Method- | ist, Mr. Paxton; St. Paul's Episcopal, { Mrs. Burroughs; Speedway Chris- | tian, Mrs. Helen Martin; First Bap- | tist, Mr. Newton; Belmont Avenue { United Brethren, Opal Nance;

SCHRICKER GETS BID TO CAPITAL

Attorney General Biddle and Senator Jackson Listed Among Guests.

Governor Schricker will attend as a guest of honor a dinner to be given May 15 at the Hotel Statler in Washington by Alex M. Campbell of Ft. Wayne, northern Indiana district attorney. Other guests will inclitle Senator Samuel D. Jackson and Attorney! General Francis Biddle. The governor also is expected to| call at the White House during his! visit in Washington. President | Roosevelt has invited him to call several times but the governor has| not gone to Washington, except for | the 1941 inaugural, since Begining his term in office.

Politics Implied

Many Democratic leaders were] inclined to attach political signifi-| cance to the dinner, pointing out that the dinner would provide Democratic officialdom with the ah opportunity to size up the only Democratic governor in the Mid. west as a vice presidential possibility. The governor, however, has re- | peatedly made it clear that he was | not a candidate for the vice presidency and he has stopped all attempts to launch a boom for him.

ner had absolutely no political sig-

AER Adv | Wright; ‘First ‘Presbyterian, Holler. First United Lutheran, Pauline R.| {Roes; Bethlehem Lutheran, Cole| Watkins; Central Avenue Methodist, Mr, Wright; First Evangelical, John | White; Centenary Christian, ‘liam Moon: Edwin Ray Methodist, | | Mrs, Carl B. Moore; Irvington Pres-| | byterian, Miss Moore. | Olive Branch Christian, C. fc. { Hogue; Hillside Christian, Mrs, J. {H. Wilson; First United Brethren,!

Mr. |

{eph Lautner; jtist, Viroqua Stephenson; Seventh|

{ Wallace Street Presbyterian, Clara | May Masterson; Carrollton Avenue { Reformed, Rosalie Spong. Brightwood Methodist, Mr. Iske; | Reorganized Church of Latter Day | Saints, Mildred Jarvis; Englewood Christian, Mr. Hamilton; Irvington

| Methodist, Mrs. Paul Mozingo, and!

“ East Tenth Street Methodist, Richard Orton.

Q. AND A. REPORTER DIES

WASHINGTON, April 25 (U. P.). —Frederick J. Haskin, 71, whose ‘syndicated question - and - answer

Silver Star Review 15, W. B. A, Scotland and has seen service on a column appeared in more than 100

Levandusky had served sentences) 61, 2, 88, 69, 83, 23, 71, 104, 133, 123, will meet at 8 p. m. Thursday in subchaser in southern waters be- | newspapers, died yesterday after an

for armed robbery. 127 and 72 and packs 5, 38 and 27. Castle Hall

RIBBON PRINTED 2.pc. bolero with its fascinating motif in white on black. White vestee front. 19.95

{tween Key West and Cuba,

THE BUDGET

SECOND FLOOR

lillness of several months.

i Nordiwond. Pall Psy

i

Wil-|

i

nificance—that it was just his an-

{invited some of his" friends. Ap- | | proximately 35 are expected to be present.

4 MEN AND WOMAN HELD IN $1160 THEFT

MUNCIE, Ind. April 25 (U. P.). —Four Indianapplis men and a

Dr.W.N. Frio, Named Delegate

The National Association of | Teachers of Speech has chosen | Dr. W. Norwood Brigance, professor of speech at Wabash ol lege, asits dele- - gate to the AmericanCouncil on Education conference May 4 and 5 in Washington, at which post-war educational problems will be studied. Editor of the “Quarterly Jour- w nal of Speech.” : official publication of the National Association of Teachers of

N. Brigance

Speech, Dr. Brigance for 10 years | research on |

was ‘director of American public address. He edited a two-volume work entitled, “A History and Criticism of American Public Address.”

Mr. Campbell said that the din-|

FATHERS DRAFT CEILING SOUGHT

Age Limit of 26 of 26 Proposed; New 4-F Work Plan

Introduced.

WASHINGTON, April 25 (U. P.). —Senator Burton K. Wheeler ®. Mont.), who led an unsuccessful

introduce - ne legislation redyeing the draft age for all fathers to 26 He said he believed that legisla-' Yon ould end confusion which he fos ed exists now “because the (directives are changed from day to day.”

Meanwhile, another amendment

| woman were held today on charges to set up military service units comlof stealing liquor and a 900-pound posed of 4-F's was introduced in the safe containing $1160 in cash and ‘senate by Senators Owen Brewster!

Roger Riley; Third Christian, Jos-|

| Presbyterian, Mrs. S. E. Garrisom |g

{

i

MAGNOLIA WHITE for a suave little crepe dress with bow neckline -and gilt-rimmed self belt. 16.95

valumbles from a Muncie tavern

Garfield Park Bap saturday night,

The quartet was arrested yester-| ay at Anderson when several bot-|would set up 4-F service units in

(R. Me.) and Josiah W. Bailey {(D. N. CD. The Brewster - Bailey proposal |

| tles of liquor were found in their | the army and navy, subject to mili-| {automobile and the woman was] tary discipline and regulations, and | wearing a ring identified as one permit their assignment to any ac-| porting back to work.

taken from the safe.

They were | tivity * ‘necessary to support and Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Richardson, Oberlin Jackson, Kenneth Haw-!armed forces.”

kins and his brother, Harold Haw- | seasonal work on farms.

kins.

UTILITY STRIKE CONTINUES

HAMMOND, Ind., April 25 (U.P.). members of the armed forces. How- | Of the old West side

setting a definite age ceiling

Music T0 AD ~ SALE OF OF BONDS

‘Broad Ripple ovle High School

Arranges Festival for |

Friday.

Broad Ripple high school’s annual | spring music festival Friday evening {will put the school well on its way {toward its $80,000 April war bond | goal. Tickets are being distributed with

! war bond and stamp purchases. Ap-

proximately 300 students of the I school orchestra, hand choir and | chorus will take part in the festival. Home room war bond agents include John Kellum, John Hague, {Jo Hayes, Cynthia Baker, Marilyn Heuslein. Mary Nelson, La Von Smith, Pem Cornelius, Joanne Lewis,

Malone Mills, Arlene Wahl, Robert

hillips, Leland Walker, Carolyn ‘Dugdar, Susan Pobst, Al Clouser, Pat Dodd, Maxine Steele, Betty | Hoover, Donald Bolle, Suzanne Mahalowitz, Louise Martin and Floyd Chafee.

With. students investing $13,075.15 in war bonds and stamps since September, Parkview School 81 has sent four jeeps and three field am-

bulances on their way to the fight.

ing fronts. Before the term ends, they expect to purchase another {ambulance. ) "An average of 92 per cent of the . students keep the school's Minute Man flag flying ‘by purchasing (Stamps. and bonds regularly. ‘The’

Spanner fw-soggresogrtortey fight oa ETE press Be te BE RA RA

{general and his sfafl to which he; ‘thers by law, said today he plans to Teacher association,

SHOWERS BROTHERS PLANT ON STRIKE

BLOOMINGTON, Ind. April 25 (U. P).—The Showers Brothers

Furniture Co. was closed today be--

cause of a strike of 800 employees over failure to have a contract replacing one which expired at midnight Saturday. Company officials said they expected to resume work today after |a meeting with representatives of the United Furniture Workers’ lunion last night, but the latter stated that they had given no gerne assurance of employees re-

It was the second strike of the

'maintain other members of the|war plant this year. / It would include -—_r | Families of men in the service CAPONE AID SLAIN \units would be entitled to depen-{| CHICAGO, April 25 (U. P)—

| dency allotments allowed regular|Joseph P. Gallichio, 34, a member °*

“42” gang

—More than 250 maintenance em- ever, the mien themselves would not| which operated with the Al Capone ployees of the Northern Indiana be entitled to veterans’ compensa- Organization during the prohibition

Public Service Co. refused to re-: turn to work today, continuing their

three-day strike which has left out- |

following week-end storms.

tion. They would, instead, be en-| titled to regular benefits provided

their duties.

lera, was ambushed and shot in the ‘head, abdomen and legs in front

civilian employes of the government of his home today. He was unable lying areas without electric service |whoe are injured in performance of to identify his assailant.

His condition was not believed critical.

BREEZE-AIRED MESHES make a lovely cool suit dress with s pockets. Pastel tones.

19.96

self-trimmed s

743