Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 3 May 1944 — Page 5

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3 0 2 ped ygssesssrsanen 55 4 Co pe Cartwright ke ahnin inns 14 ; < Sata esInrRaeL € = Stark Increases Edge Over Hiner ovine | Jal rt 8 Huff in Ga 0. Pe 3 : Ei IE Eagan Sesssssasesennae 68 ; 22 al on King Seasess ine eniganet 5 Ssssssansasrsnsne 3 ’ Contest. . EATEN EN es aaa chRR ERE sa asES shee 1 y: : Mahola sesnneseeeens A py vvevsiieee 54 | ° (Continued From Page One) Stark ...cuccvceencieones BL Qe TE Ug |e opponent George Schmidt by “ Updike sernaranatirsiens 3 “ McLemore var sidadiess 53 501 to 52 votes. C Tomlinson JUDGE CIRCUIT COURT ~ | Mendenhall ..........., 108 | Counting of ballots &t Ft eel se & > Money Sssvesnassnsrenes 58 hall got to a © Chamberlin ........s... M3.) SOE "*''* gr |of a shortage of Democratic countGvambe Lil BE | GL Fen and bee of the length of Malle... eee uceneeny: 300 Oglesby .,.,.......c000 1% Sheriff at the request of E ; “4 Oxley 5 toy Lo purees * 3 G. O.P. ty Chairman Henry E ‘tn | “300 3 Bowell 's.isieeraaines 154} Ostom, sent. trusiies to Tomlinson LT Rhoads oo **** "sg [hall to clean up waste paper and Niblack o..veiivneneeeees M9 | BREE ietaruieetett g7 [debris which cluttered the Sawing ATE SENATOR ROEM ..cv114se0veesen 40 |H00F, “Mr, Ostiom feared —— 333 Ruch aah teas rears . . fire ould break out'and burn some Bellinger pi 72 Sallee FressstsNsnsentnse 32 of the issued for more RR 200 B asia iaNia cas 151 Mr. Ostrom a plea Brokenburr sksusstene ves 224 Schntigey rca 126 counters. He said that those who Glass Sesssesssassrssees 9 A JU pd ane 51 had applied and had received noGray srsssssnensen 8 8 122 tices that they were not needed will Hill SsssgiBsrR NII RII RLS 52 . 256 be needed Now. : erascaavreseees 3 42 Soe; Fepulr leaders asserted Martin sstsssTerancssnciy that the need or Republican count- a Miller Cease sara wo Turner, R. S. asssnssnr en ’ 51 > i Moffett .. . 256 Weaver Sesesssnsnarann 27 ers at Tomlinson hall resulted {rom EWE axsassancsnberes HLL WORHAGIS +e rasssraranees . 28 |18iure of the eity hall faction to Wolcott Theta 289 WHHAME oo sneer reserrss 37 supply their quota. . hy Wyatt Sees tsssnessenan 140 3 i i ‘JOINT STATE SENATOR Zaring ......cocecieneee UH BALTZELL DIES: BalS ois erinrrnisenns WT JOINT STATE MARS, I hii iV) White ....cooocovvnenve 253 REPRESENTATIVE ; a SR | STATE REPRESENTATIVE | Blackwell ............... 212 WIFE OF I, S. JUDGE » : Jones ...... ssresrnssrese 330 a Aber covesorreeries 8 | JMC 20 pina Brom Page One) Angelo evitvicsinne 18 COUNTY TREASURER 1925, when Judge Balizell was apAtkins sessaqpessecencns 102 Huse ; ; 387 pointed to the federal bench. Prior Baxter Seas ssessnnee 115 Ya to that they had lived for 20 years Beckwith Sessa snttane 56 COUNTY SHERIFF in Princeton, where Mr. Baltzell Peville Geran esses tenn 24 Campbell BEA sas panes ts » 72 was judge of the Gibson circuit sssssssesserasres 38 | Clemens ........ve.c... 28 [cOURL : Burge Cesss estas nnInee 2 BARKIES 2.veesesssersss 20 Unable to take part in local acBurnett sess assesses 165 Nine AEE AEE R AEA SEE 90 tivities because of her health, she Campbell ...ecenernssees 178 Petit ....o.veeeevesesss. 204 |devoted her time to needlework and Oaylor ...coveveeecesise 88 | Roush ....... askaveveava 23 |cultivating flowers and pianis. Sue CIAfIeY coivcrcorsscecess 92 was a member of the Central is~ OIE corvenssirecnscsrens 56 COUNTY CORONER tian church. 3 Deeds SRNR RRIRIIENMDS n> Storms SESE pss sngssrrens 517 Mrs, Baltaul) Wa bor bv Bummer i Diets CRIB RENBNERRETR ENS 57 UNTY mm, the daughter of William | DOWNEY «sveasscrsncesss 192 i SURVEYOR Alice Carlton. Her father for many s! Ehlers SessnsensaRIeRE RY 101 Br pasar renee yey wo years was editor of The Sumner | Eppert Bassssessansanans ~ 48 Schmidt .........co000nn ; Press. : i Ewing SssnsssctRtsntneY 38 COUNTY COMMISSIONER She was married to Judge Baltzell i Fleld sssansreanssnninnne 4 (Second District) on March 28 1004, at Evansville. | Fortine escescscssiveces 166 vy They had one child, Robert Carlton ! FIantS cececcnccrrisince 3 BOBSOR .uuuonssresssines 263 Baltzell, who died in infancy. i Le EA 118 WARIKSE o..oonsrevssnrss 281 Survivors, besides the judge, are {| Geisel ....oie00eeiieneee 88 a sister, Mrs. Chester Grubb, \ Glatebrook u...aie.ne. 38 | OO ty |Bloomington, Il; two brothers { GRADE ..isesssnsscsssse 129 Merwin Dale, Lawrenceville, Ill, | Griffith ...evceviveerens 22 Mendenhall ............ 335 and Morris Dale, Olney, Ill, and a . Hackley ...ovienreniiane 8 White ......... sereansss 224 “|cousin, Miss Etta B. Truscott, who lives at the Baltzell home. Short funeral services will be con1 1 1 Present Cong en ducted at the Planner & Buchanan * ’ ( mortuary at 4:30 p. m. tomorrow, with the Rev. W. A. Shullenberger

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Win in Indiana Primaries

(Continued From Page One)

* Republican, drew steadily away from Alr Force Maj. Chester V. Lorch, former New Albany mayor, C. House, Evansville. Returns from 298 precincts of 396 La PFollette, * 3959, and House 1394. La Follette’s Democratic foe apparently will be Charles J. Eichel, Evansville

Eichel's total for 293 precincts was 9006, compared with 4299 for Ben F. Garland, Huntingburg at“torney, and 2686 for William E. Rogers, New Albany fumiture dealer

" 7th District Returns , Virtually complete returns from

the seventh district gave: Republi-

can—Rep. Gerald W. Landis, Linton, 21.693; Army Capt. James PF. Miller, Edinburg, 3386. Democratic —Arthur H. Greenwood, former New Deal congressman of Washington, Ind. 7555; John &. Adams, Vincennes high school coach, 7196, and Dr. Otto A. Noland, Bloomington dentist, 4405. Of 430

| Precincts, only “11 were stil not

Feported. Rep. Forest A. Harness, Kokomo, walked away with the Fifth district nomination, while Mrs. Edith Griswold, Peru school teacher and widow of former congressman Glenn Gris- - wold, held a 700-vote lead over her - three ppponents for the Democratic tion, i With all except 50 precincts complete of 443, tabulations gave Har- « ness, 26,651; Willard L. Hamilton, Frankfort war worker, 1544, and ~ Oscar B. Smith, Frankfort farm , editor and unionist, 1462, in the - G. O. P. race: Rep. Ray J. Madden (D. First district); Rep. Charles A. Halleck, (R. . Becond) ; Rep. Noble J. Johnson (R.), and Olis G. Jamison (D. Sixth); Rep. Earl Wilson (R.), and George ~ W. Elliott (D, Ninth); Sidney E. ~ Baker (D. 10th), and Rep. Louis ~ Ludlow (D. 11th district), were uni opposed for nomination.

Phelps Trails Gillie G. O. P. Congressman George W.

3 Gillie, Ft. Wayne, held a margin of

15,374 to 2811 over a fellow towns-

man, State Senator Charles A. Phelps, on the basis of returns from 304 of the 317 precincts in the |c}

Point, former secretary of state, a slim margin, 5383 to 5138, over Fred! F. Schutz, Gary. Three others were! in the race to oppose Madden in |the general elections next Novem-! ber. In the second district Democratic] race, James Otis Cox, Valparaiso! real estate man, led Joseph C. Major, Monticello, who had party organization blessings, 3314 to 2062, on returns from 358 of( 378 pre-! cincts, 135 of them compldte.

Margin Narrowing

In the Demoéfatic race in the! Pifth district, former Mayor Olin D.| Holt of Kokomo, who hoped for a; political comeback after having served two federal prison sentences in the 1930's for Volstead act and WPA labor fraud, trailed. Voters also nominated party candidates for 26 of the 50 state senate seats, all 100 posts in the state house of representatives and for hundreds of county offices throughout the state.

3-DAY ATTACK HITS JAPS IN CAROLINES

(Continued From Page One)

shot down 60 enemy planes in combat, destroyed another 60 on the ground and the warships blasted five more in the first day. On the second day, one enemy. fighter attempted to challenge the raiders, but was shot dgwn. « Tokyo radio, which said the {task force consisted of more than 10 aircraft carriers and battleships, quoted Japanese naval quarters that the attack was “an effort to drive a wedge into the Japanese strategic line in the Carolines sector.” Truk, which had been hit 37 times previously, was singled out by the Vice Adm. Mare A. Mitscher, commander of the task forces, as the first target for the operations. On both Saturday and Sunday, carrierbased planes dropped 800 tons of bombs, which the communique said caused heavy damage to shore facilities, : On Sunday, carrier-borne planes raided Satawan in the Nomoi island group, 150 miles southeast of Truk,

i church.

SHIFTED TO FRANCE

| officiating and additional services { and burial will be held at Sumner at {23 p. m. Friday ‘at the Christian

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CLAIM 50 DIVISI

(Continued From Page One)

satellite powers into last-ditch resistance. It also may have been designed to convince the western allies of Germany's determination to fight to the end, and hus promote the fading prospects of a stalemate. Propaganda? The Stockholm report of a big shift of German strength from the Russian front for the defense of western Europe is in keeping with that line of psychological warfare. The report, sent to the London Daily Telegraph, purported to be an “uncensored account from inside Germany.” It said 50 _divisions, or upward of 600,000 men, had been taken from Russia, leaving only 1,750,000 to face the Russ ‘armies “in the greatest military gamble ever made.” The last would undoubtedly be true. The report, however, should be taken with considerable reserve. The Russians are at the gates of the Balkans and, through Poland, at the outer walls of the Reich itself,

~~ Invites Disaster

To remove that many men just as the Russians are tensing for dn all-out assault in co-ordina-tion with the western invasion would invite quick disaster, The German people would be dismayed by such a move, They fear a Russ invasion more than the one from the west, and they already have seen their armies in South Russia crumble before-the Soviet might. In fact, British intelligence reports indicate that the Germans have been over-propagandized on the strength of the wehrmacht's western defenses anjl have come to regard the as slight compared to that from Russia. The current outburst of German home propaganda about the of invasion may be in-

“OFF POINT LIST

All Types Made Ration-Free| ‘Except Beef Steaks

And Roasts.

(Continued From Page One)

coming to market “is not large enough in relation to demand to warrant any point change at this time.” A record run of hogs has been coming to market and slaughter is near peak levels, he explained, Lend-lease, which ordinarily takes up to 35 per cent of the pork production, he said, now had adequate stocks and no pork currently is going to lend-lease. Army and navy demands for meat, principally beef, have been brought to a “current basis,” . he added. Lamb and mutton production now is greater than it was at this time last year, largely because droughts have dried up pasture! lands in some producing areas and | supplies of dry feed are very tight. At the same time Bowles ordered the monthly allotment of 60 red points for each individual cuf to 30, beginning May 7. Because of the wide selection of meats now made] available without red ration points, | Bowles said the monthly point! allotment slash was necessary to keep ration values from becoming! “watered.” dated 30 red points every two weeks.

Butter Still Rationed

Red stamps R8 and T8 will be validated next Sunday. After that, no more red stamps will become good until June 3. Under today's orders, the only red-point items now requiring ration points, in addition to the choice beef cuts, are butter, margarine, cheese and cheese products and evaporated milk. At a press conference Bowles indicated that points might be lowered later on the beef steaks and roasts when the full run of cattle begins to reach market, He added however, that he could not say now “when or whether the meats we are making point free will again have to be glyen point values.” “Much depends upon the feed situation, which, in turn, is dependent in large measure on the weather,” he explained.

Record Proportions

“The animal population now is of record proportions. Whether it can be maintained‘ depends upon the amount of feed, and feed grains must be shared by meat animal herds with dairy cows and poultry. “Part of our feed grains must ve set aside for the making of industrial alcohol, . an important ingredient in synthetic rubber for automobile tires.”

will continue to be”

not be restored to these less absolutely necessary.” He pointed out that in connection

meats un"w

(Continued From Page One)

was made on the recommendation of solid support for the national of Field Marshall Erwin Rommel, | administration apd contended that German anti-invasion commander, | Dis opponents attacked him only to

the dispatch said, characterizing|

gamble ever made.” Radio Berlin disclosed that Roin-

mel just had informed his battery commanders along the— Atlantic coast to expect an allied air-borne landing “every day, every hour” and Capt. Ludwig Sertorious,

Nazi military commentator, said the invasion “will not be long now.” At least seven other German commentators in the past 24 hours have broadcast warnings to the populations of axis Europe that they must be prepared for heavy simultaneous blows from the east, west and south. . Kurt Dittmar, in a Berlin broad-

the move as “the greatest military | port of administration policies.

cast their ballots in the Florida! primary for the first time. Pepper campaigned on a platform

factional faith by 8 p. m. Members | victory. of the regular G.O.P. county or- | yawned, “I'm going home to bed.” ganization and cify Hali'’s insurgent | Victory committee ambled around each other and exchanged fishyeye stares.

‘143 287 ") 205 Te iE RT » Schlosser Shssss sass 522 . ¥ Tr - Cesrsenbeeninnses 1200 | SlVEE wiiaiisseciiniii. - 388 Florida Names Pepper and Smith Ses ssesEssRsRnssen 230 Sa . . JUDGE CIRCUIT COURT. | gon [7770070000000 Gp Alabama Gives Hill Deputy Clerk Cletus Seibert as he COX ....covinvrines samen 1116 Wadsworth Srssvssensnne 244 * 8 - marshaled 1200 central counters Hoffman ............... 240 | Willams eaannsavtscss mn : Big Majority. inte. line at Tomlinson hall last PROSECUTING f sESavessses “esann . 3 ’ ATTORNEY tn ome STATE ; (Continued From Page One) That's the way it was. There was Bradshaw .......... 683 REPRESENTATIVE 1748 of the state’s 2500 boxes.' Vir-; ® hot time in the old town, but it Howard ...... Sasbareses 716 pum tually complete returns from the| Wasn't as hot as it used to be. With STATE SENATOR Murphy .......oo.eenn 651 |stn al district, indicated | the ‘exception of a bleary-eyed ar- : : COUNTY TREASURER that Rep. Joe Starnes, a member of Sument or so, things functioned Kirby ...... ees erines 744 . ‘ the Dies committee, had been de- quietly and slowly from the time a : ODNBON: weesssrnvesces cs 344 Mueller seissesavecsaane 544 feated by Albert Rains of Gadsden. fleet of 200 cabs descended on Littlejohn sesserniedss 487 O'Connor seseasnasnssns 312 The latest tally gave Rains 13,118 Tomlinson hall with the precious Lyons SATs aS ERR SNRs s 583 Phillips srrsssvenese 5 votes, Starnes, 12,003 and M. L. red and white ballot boxes until MOOK: ..cvcrriranrerncns 378 | Pitsenberger ............ 408 | Shaddix 644. County Clerk Jack Tilson gave the MUITAY oercessresnscnsse i COUNTY SHERIFF . Florida—Pepper had 105,118 votes 80 signal, exactly two hours late. BUUVAD .eneesrsser.. 538 § BIGNE wesesssrsnoce.... m {71622 for is nearest oppaneni, ed Wie sential sown warathol(, Ee 7 Cochian aee............. 5¢ [Judge Ollie Edmunds of Jackson-| CHEFS expected to last through JOINT STATE SENATOR Eastes oo ooorenoi" gg |ville in a five-man race, and needed day got under wa Pitcher ..............., 831 | Jennings ............... gn 43 clean cut majority fo avoid a COTY MUeT 8p. Ul. the laxicabs Vv Sr 559 |runoff. Meager returns showed 10 on Tomlinson. hall STATE REPRESENTATIVE, : "4 |presidential delegates pledged tod discharged their cargos of weary a. ss | Smyris ooo... 117 “l] [President Roosevelt and seven| Of WOrKeTs and heavy ballot boxes; Banks ...-.e-eon.no.... 38 | Tinder-..eee..sn.i. 5¢ |Pledged to Senator Harry F. Byrd t ? MStitens sn “kes of in their Tespec- up of impa tient electio in Burkert ................ 450 COUNTY CORONER ih Iginis Jeanie Tomlinson’s musty corridors. The Burton eeceiveavs iv... 228 * swing shift at Allison's couldn't Clark .......... crass 261 3p .niieaieiiniii an 379 South Dakota—A Dewey slate of | have been noisier than the in-| ments, CURIBR cer ecuvsvnnivinis 250 Webb ::................. 731 |11 delegates to the Republican con-|coherent chorus of some €000|clerk was given a warm round of DelNeY «.eeeoeeveesiie. 393 COUNTY SURVEYOR vention was leading a slate pledged | flushed party stalwarts, all anxious| applause and the counters settled DOfR. .i..vs sides . 465 fo Lt. Cmdr. Harold E. Stassen,|to recount the poll trend in their|back to wait while supervisors ponBOWE ciara iin i sr “JONNEONR "....<........... on former governor of Minngsola. i various precincts. dered complexities of the manyPIAEIEr +sacrseesisnrset. Ryan ........c..coonnees Democratic slates, n| Most harried persons in Tomlin-|Paged tally sheets. POR Siniesearearsscernes 258 . COUNTY COMMISSIONER opposition to that chosen by the|son's half-block long hall were| Just as Clerk Tilson was about to Hall ,.sccorchornnnasine 37 : (Second District) ig party leaders, were pledged County Clerk Tilson and Election start the official count, Judge Dewey BKB oiovieviveraneeii F288 : ] President Rousevelt. Senator | Commissioner ~ Albert ‘Thompson, Myers, who ran a close race with Johns .....evvecseeein, 323 Schonecker ............ 166 Gran ato EE Sor..a C. both of them green hands at super- [Mayor Tyndall in the 1942 general Killian ....... A 3713 Stevens ..... evessararss 301 EE » for the Re- vising last-minute ballot round-ups. election, was seen lighting up a 1atham ..c.coneverrenn. 219 | Talge ...... cecssreses 121 ou can senatorigl nomination on Mr, Tilson, for the most part, relied |cigaret and removing his coat for Miles, Li A. coiviiriienns 287 Wade ......0......ci.0.. 539 |the basis of returns from 1163 of upon the experienced “know how” a hard night's work. Judge Myers Miles, L. G. «cov0vuss 261 COUNTY COMMISSIONER We states 1963 precincts. of his deputy, Mr. Seibert, but Mr. |is a supervisor. Miller ......... Joni gee This District n Florida primary, the three Thompson, representing the G.O.P.| Smiling and shaking hands with Montgomery ........ 206 ) other candidates, Millard Conklin organization, was emitting his fretful [all within arm's reach, Mayor Morrissey .............. 1 J} Fulton s............... 815 |Of Daytona Beach, Alston Cockrell cries from the central count wilder- | Tyndall assured his faithful fol- : ; = Be Jacksuniville and Finley Moore ness up to ithe wee small hours. {lowers that all was well. Republic- . . Po e City, apparently failed So Everybody's There Jan County Chairman Henry Osompromise ©QCe obtain enough votes to check Pep (trom, on the. other hand, was al|per's majority and force him into| Tomlinson hall was thick and [ready accepting congratulations on Hope Abandoned {a runoff with Edmunds. Negroes buzzing with politicians of every a taken-for-granted organization

At 9:45 p. m. Mr. Ostrom

ITALY NAZIS - DESERTING

After all, this was the| ALLIED HEADQUARTERS, Na-

stab President Roosevelt in the| “pay-off,” after two years of bit-|ples, May 3 (U. P.) —German sol-

back. All four of his opponents challenged his down the line sup-

Hill also was a setback to hopes of anti-administration leaders of a revolt in the Democratic South. He

ter scrapping.

diers are deserting in considerable In dark corners and out of the|numbers on the. Italian front and way places there was a brief flurry |are trying to escape into the Vatiof betting on the heated prose-|can, allied headquarters spokesmen cutor’s race, with the odds running] said today.

hailed his victory as “a verdict for | America’s war effort.” Hill, whol nominated President Roosevelt for | a fourth term, based his entire campaign on his support of the| administration while Simpson] pleaded for “less bureaucracy and| | more states’ rights.”

are extremely favorable to the! Anglo-Americans.” “No doubt the enemy will at-

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Previously OPA vali-| |

He added that it has been, “and |

cast, acknowledged that the allies held sea and air superiority in the west and said that “certain factors

ations by air,” Dittmar said.

tempt to carry out encircling oper-|

Radio Vichy said an allied attack] apepared imminent in Italy. | -

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