Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 8 May 1944 — Page 3
ats of Sh {Post-War Conference Gets Mrs. Madge Cray of Indisn-| State Senate Leader’s vig of escort i. At Er Mrs. Apple, 8 widow, is survived Recommendations. see a single German fighter, and Riviera. / om by.a , Miss Floretta Len- reported that their worst enemy pet a 3 8. Steel Corp. had in mind when (Continued From Page One) soon after ham, and had conducted an in- (Continued From Page One) (Continued From Page One) 1 esses. crash. : Modern Plastics magazine. con- it bought a “substantial interest” Mr. Huffman, surance agency in Sheridan. was the weather. The temperature ode waist fportant. | 10; the Gunpissn._ Housing Corp. turbulent labor situation and, be- 3 2 Indianapolis ao wiio| 0008, then to Washington, then|aropped to 45 degrees below sero| els nw was eink DOE, TRC that 26 pages of the current issue of New Albany, Ind. Incidentally, fore the week is out, he probably|Fesicent 2 JE to dt Oscar B. Thistlethwaite vile) pak to Indianapolis, then back | as the bombers climbed mors than|tries that paratroops may land © are filled with technical informa- hig steet's announced iaiention of TOES He ins Tow on the| Sader and lahe Spusior Ior He) motiel of he oon prs Thistle the Jucal Commumity, four miles high, dropping their|Britain “to disorganize allied preps = tion od data, released bY ne ge Welayisie : wed ie Pidue Sot wii |complicated situation arising from|way Oity. His wife operated a res- waite M Sausk guard, i pe “atid arts” {raining | bombs through the overcast with|arations in Britain. and spread ; TY SO war o- put it, for the first time, into the government seizure of Montgomery | taurant for the Century Biscult Oc.| sheridan, and Mldred of Indian- |, institutions of higher special devices. panic among the invasion trooply am te a hs... | business of selling direct to the Ward, an action alteady under con- 18 Yealn Buth were members. of lapolis : = RETUINGS, picture of potential “For the most part Jerry could|yho have been kept walling a : : ‘consuming public. investigation Fairfax Christian church. Bodies of Mrs. Apple and Mrs.| oct. tfalls ded not break through the circle of " yo ssn cs 3 7} evasion : wile wire Tih 10 AUiuar JA We painted bY) smerican fighters,” Capt. Don Gay- te a. nr tat Headaches Was to Marry / a! Clarence Jackson, executive vice- Home Guard Ready : Quick Action Expected Big Shoe Demand Seen Biggest Their. daughter. : funeral home in Sheridan and| resident of the Indiana chamber of lord, Waterloo, Is., pilot back from ’d It's now a good bet that legisla- i : ‘But the biggest items on his| EF LN , Justiia, ah S-1sarviges. 108 Mr. Dell will be in|eommerce Berlin, said. “Our group did not| British officials, from Prime Mine = manufacturers : . x. tion for speedy, final settlement Shoe believe |sgenda were 1944 political decisions|;,; qq to have Ty Noblesville. io tse oxi get a single attack, but our particu |iyrer Churchill down, have warned 2 of canceled war contracts, having there'll be a domestic market for |and the long-a western inva- been married May| pr. Myron H. Green, deputy 3 trying ourselves | jar escort did plenty of dogfighting.”| =, past that Germany may ste = senate unanimously, | 600 million sion of Europe. There were as 15 to Cpl. Horace John Ferguson|county coroner, took charge of the into thinking that the going Won't} The forces which attacked Bruns- . 4 passed the ’ pairs a year when ra- headaches in these of Indianapolis, now stationed in|jnvestigation be tough when the war's over,” ex- | wick had a different story. More tempt a counter-invasion to upsed will be adopted by the house ane tioning ends and restrictions on Hany polenta all the I White North Carolina. claimed Mr. Jackson. “We Warn|than 100 Messerschmitts and Focke-|the allies’ western front schedule, . edqme Jw by, or soon after, materials and labor are lifted. The |g Et put together. Besides the daughter, surviving Two More Die edch other to avoid this mistake | gwylfs rose through the clouds to However, Britain’s volunteer “hom@ = y. shoe industry's previous peak year, o TE declined to answer when Mrs. Huffman are her father, C. B.| Two more deaths were added to and that mistake, to avert inflation | swarm against the bombers. The guard” of business and prof “ia. 1941. was 500-mill} ' lasked whether, should the Presi- White, Noblesville; two brothers, Marion county's traffic toll during| oF deflation, but believe me, either | Gasis even maintained their attacks|men and laborers, still more thal Big Market Promised " y Le dent decide to run for re-election, Clyde and. Harty File, bu of | the week-end. RAE OE is evitelle, while the raiders were on their HOW) Shions: has been placed of ; lesville, ve sisters, Mrs. Marjorie Davis, 23, of Shel-|- + * ! h . ex . : Prime Miniser Churchill's plan | Bankers to Assist GE aly a ready for a political | Soblesvile, anid te sims, MB] ify Matlorie Davis, To, of Sha "weve got to take 8 ook through bom’ yuns _ Shrougy anti-atreralt| = recently, home guards broke = : campaig a By i Wheatron Kelso, Plainfield; Mrs.|terday of ujries shi the rear-view ow at the warm up a mock invasion by paratroops 30 le sented by She Bes ws Se Eis he eG Ve William McClintock and Mrs. Al-}an ay of i le Nu = we've been climbing. Then we must Sees. 8 ol Fighters in a northwest town. All the *ine = government to bombed-out fam- ces & nation- tion tne fred Olsen, both of Noblesville, and | road and Highway 67 on May 1 realize that after every hill there's| “We were flying along peacefully |yaders” were killed or captured i§ may mean an immense mar- wide committee of bankers to ad- |entering the White House. Mr. Mrs. Pete Willinghan of ALE y ol y 1 |’ downgrade. before the target when I saW the exercise. The ors party of 3j4 4 for American companies. It's vise and assist small and medium- Roosevelt left Washington on ols. ¥ P She Wie rove 329 at driven “Post-war planning is the brake whole bunch of enemy fighters uim-|tackers which broke through théig that any country except | sized businesses in meeting their |April 8. The spot he picked of-| = fr. Huffman is survived by his by when 3b pa into Ragin that should assist us to go down|ing at us through the clouds,” 2d|lines “blew up” a bridge g United States could begin to | special of post-war re- |fered the type of seclusion he has| ver Jefferson Huffman of Lapel; vet M: M on n ut-| at hill as quickly and as smoothly | Lt. George E. Hersett of Route 5,|the northern and southern parts of 3 such an order for many years conversion and expansion for high [sought for years. |two brothers, Lee W. Huffman of ment on Mann road. Mr. Keller re-| ope » Spokane, Wash, a navigator, re-|the town : the war, and even the Amer- production and high employment. Heavy forests of mossy live oak, Lapel and Do 1 . ceived chest and arm injuries, but lated Berlin OFF dents of 8 toes 2: prefabricators would have to | Chairman of the new CED com- |cypress and pine surrounded the pel nald Huffman of An-|{will recover. Bureaucracy Assailed ley cOrTespo o E ®| erson, and three sisters, Mrs.| George Disponnette, 83, of 520 About 12 of them slammed into|holm newspapers reported thal = their production many mittee is Vice President Hugh R. |red brick Georgian home—Baruch’s Gladys Layton Noblesville, Nc 8 ponnette, 83, of Pounding the speaker's podium us, and a fou minutes later 35 more | Marshal Erwin Rommel ne. v6 undertake It McGee, Bankers Trust Co, New |“Big house” where the President cy... price, Anderson, a R Wabash 3. Piro Saturday at| oie the flat of his hand, Mr. Jack- | hit us in a head-on attack. They|anti-invasion commander, hasshifta wever, English prejudices York. lived for a month. ‘ Charles Boo oe " o v Baspiial, of injuries received i} disclaimed the current trend|were barreling ont" through the | ed several divisions made up of poet. al Marilyn Mears, who was born in et car at a Mn anion by a toward government responsibility in| formation from front to back, hold-| whose relatives have been killed o88 : > Indianapolis, was a pupil at school | washington sts. Busines and professional fields, and | ing down the triggers all the way. injured in allied air raids -to the = «@ Survi ec : I saw seven go through one part of | West Wall defenses in the belief | 7. Su Yo desler. oy orci Virginia Native “The restoration of the climate] the formation—and only three came they will fight with “a fury borg 3 STRAUSS \ 1 are three brothers, Walter and Her-| Mr. - Disponnette, who came to of free enterprise is absolutely out on the other side. Right ahead of hate.” TE SAYS: S T 0 R E H 0 uU R S M 0 N D A Y 12:1 5 T | L L 8:45 bert, both at home, and Richard, on Indianapolis six years ago from essential in any sensible post-war|of us a Messerschmitt crashed into - a livestock | 5e¥-UP-" a Fort, and both blew up.” E
duty with the navy in the Pacific] V.
the Berwick ave. address. Formerly Fireman
General Motors Corp., Mr. Dell for-
| in Sheridan and owned a filling station there.
(Continued From Page One)
and July toward their individual
quotas. All bonds purchased during the
fifth war loan total, although the drive dates are June ‘12 through July 8. Only E, F and G series bonds and CO series savings notes will be on sale the full two months. | Four other types of government se-| curities will be offered during the | four-week period between drive dates.
a quota covenant card, which is to be signed and returned to the treasury's war finance committee, was | sent. | Every Indiana newspaper has been| | asked to publish an honor holl list-| | ing the stores, offices and factories ‘in which employee groups have| | pledged to support the invasion and | | the more than 300,000 Hoosier sons | now in the armed services. Honor | roll listings will be by counties ex-| cept in large cities, where the lis
t= ing will be keyed to firms in the! community. Firms will be listed in|
juotas. Supplementing the ‘“buy-where-you-work” phase of the drive will be a farm-to-farm canvass and an i vestment solicitation of potentially large buyers in which Indiana's bankers will play an important role. No one will be overlooked in the drive, for which a $16,000,000,000 national goal has been set. The state’s quota for purchases by
ACTIVE FELLOWS —like (Fish Catcher) the fellow with the Porkers—get their SLACK SUITS from The Man's Store!
(From where else!)
EVENTS TODAY
Indians Shoe Buyers week, Claypool hotel Indiana
hibit, Block's auditorium. Municipal Gardens Women's club, clubhouse. Tudor Hall school, open school, 3 p. m. Red Cross course for water sal tors, Kirshbaum center, 7:30 p.m.
EVENTS TOMORROW
Indiana Shee Buyers week, Claypool hotel Indiana Economic council, Claypool hotel uild, ‘Hoosier Breakfast a Sardi's,” Columbia club. National Association of Women, Washing ton hotel, 7:30 p.m. Catering Executives club, hotel, 8 p.m.
Tailored like he likes it . . . with enerous cuttings . . . and WASHABLE . . . just what
he (and mom) ordered! spring concert, at the school, 8 p. m.
His Slack Suits are from those two MARRIAGE LICENSES
champions .-. .' . « « KAYNEE and . . . DAVID COPPERFIELD. Both know how to make Slack Suits like nobody else's . . . For instance, they use firm twill pocket linings . . . seams with stayed
therefo
e Fenander, 19, of
Ralph L. Kerr, _ Hope Angelin Park. Mark James Hill, Elsie Shirleen Hittle,
Ind. Harold Edward Bader, 4 ton; Eva Pauline Jarrett Bradshaw, - of 2009 Singleton. : Frank Leroy Grow, Butler university;
16,
22. Aviation Cadé Marcia Ann Nichol
edges . . . outlets in trousers . . . a0, of 1038 Vermont, Quincy. Ouelin'Schiosser, af Chita: and lots of pockets for a oy: Bugene Ress, 10, of 33K; TeRBL | vincin, Marina Mellon. 8 Methoqit. where ER , Samp Atterbury, | Reymond, Neti ToS, at Mathoais. Ind.: Edith G. Wilson, 20, of 636 N George, Rubai Purdy, at Methodist
follow's paraphernalia.
.| Charles
war zone, and a sister, Barbara, of| dealer, Disponnette, of Muncie; ters, Mrs. Mae Blackburn, of Indianapolis, and Mrs. Lydia Myers, An employee of Allison division of | of
merly was a fireman and policemanjp. m. peace C Washington Park cemetery.
$281 000,000; Biggest Goal, Sef in State's 5th Loan Drive
individuals is $133,000,000, of which $75,000,000 has been set as the goal for E bonds. Corporations and businesses are expected to invest the remaining $48,000,000 needed to two months will be credited to the| reach the $281,000,000 over-all quota. i — i ——————
AWAIT BRADFORD PARTY APPOINTMENT
With the quota assignment letters Ostrom is expected to announce tomorrow the
the order in which they accept
n-|
IN INDIANAPOLIS
Economic council, Claypool hotel. Civie theater affairs committee, doll ex-
Department | house, at thelw fety instrue- | John Wa
Washington |
Warren Central high school senior chorus, |
These lists are from official records in the county court house. The Times. re, is not responsible for errors
25, of 2605 Carrehigh 1909
17, Morristown, Ind:;| Morristown,
41, of 2009 Single28,
18, of 2122 N. Capitol;
irginia where he was is survived by a son, Walter two sis-
Mulberry. Services were to be held at 3:30 today at the Harry Moore hapel. Burial will be in
G. O. P. Chairman Henry E.
appointment of James L. Bradford as Republican district chairman. He is expected too to reappoint Mrs. Fern Norris as district vice chairman. Mr. Ostrom and other members of the Republican county committee were re-elected Saturday. The other officers are Mrs. Agnes Todd, vice chairman; George Johnson, secretary, and Edwin Steers Sr. treasurer. James L. Beattey, attorney, was | elected county chairman at the Democratic county convention. Other officers named were Mrs. Katherine P. Dunn, vice chairman; | Earl J. Cox, secretary, and George | Sadlier, treasurer. Mr. Beattey appointed Henry O. Goett, former superior court judge, as district chairman, and Mrs. Edward C. Wakelam as vice chairman.
ris: Addie Pearl Adams, 44, of 42 W M | Jo Atterbury, Ind.; Marjo Ann 20. of 3¢ W. Mechanic, Leland Herman Krause, 24,' U. Stout Field; Eleanor Jean Barnum, of 4326 College, \lliam C. Walls, Ann Boring, 18, of TN llace Krensky, McLemore, 51, of 1230 N. Illi
rie 8
Maggie nois.
BIRTHS Girls
t| Dwight, Jane Barker, at | Francis, Shirley Stevens, . | Woodrow, Alice Waggoner, | Wilmer, Frances Baxter, at Coleman, Robert, Mary Molends, at an, Donald, Janice Pitts, at Coleman. { Robert, Sallie Ayers, at Methodist. Harold, Mildred Cranor, at Methodist. Robert. Laura Mendenhall, at Methodist Carroll, Annabelle Manship, a Willie, Doris Reese, af Met Ross, Mary Stanley, at Methodist. William, Alice Stanley, at ‘Methodist. Alonzo, Mable Beasley, Charles. Rena Green, at 1726 Olive. Price, Helen Hamlar, at 21% 8S. Beville. Boys Johnson, at City. Randall, at City,
St. Vincent's.
st.
John, Annabelle Theodore, Emma | Edward, Marjorie ‘Heitzman, ce Har ce S. willis, Roberta Smith, at St. Vincent's. Edwin, Prances Eckard, at Coleman. Lawrence, Orpha Hinds, at Coleman, Chalmer, Ozella Schlosser, at Coleman.
y
t, 8,
‘| Melvin, Annabelle Scott, at
Methodist. James, Helen Alexander, at 826 W. oth. re—
titude at the peace tables. ... When we sit down to talk over the coming peace, we must realize that our conquered foes are the same vandals, Huns, Germans—call them what you will—that have twice forced millions of our youths into the bloodiest wars of history. “The Versailles treaty was not un-| at him,” he said. just. It simply wasn’t enforced.”
organization. . . work together in relatively harmonious groups, we'll pull through of our | own momentum.”
Morris hn Conrad Siegesmund Jr. 23, Camp Evans, helbyville, Ind. 8. army, 20, 21, Tipton, Ind.; Jean
Kealing. 49, 732 E. Ohio;
‘at St. Vincent's. at St. Vincent's.
t Methodist.
at 1708 Martindale.
at St. Vin-
nt's, old, Lorymme Mathuer, at st. Vinnt
He also demanded a “realistic at-
America’s greatest hope,
Hassell E. Schenck, president of
the Indiana Farm bureau, tbld In-
diana farmers that a “return to normal is impossible. Well have a new normal, determined by scientific farming, higher price levels and increased production. There's a great new field ahead.”
URGES HEARST BE CALLED TO COURT
WASHINGTON, May 8 (U. P.). —Edward James Smythe, testifying as a defense witness in the contempt proceedin his sedition trial attorney, James J. Laughlin, said today he had asked Laughlin to subpena william Randolph Hearst, Rabbi Stephen Wise, Harry Hopkins, Earl Browder and Justice Felix Frankfurter. Smythe, one of 29 defendants in the mass sedition trial, told Judge Jennings Bailey he had wanted those men called to support his
Pleasantville, N. Y., a waist gunner, said the enemy fighters approached in formation, then split up and attacked singly from every direction.
St. Sgt. Anthony M. Scarpone. of
Bags Folk-Wulf «1 {followed one Focke-Wulf in
from the right wing and opened up
“At 300 yards he
blew up, and every piece was burnasserted | ing as it floated down.” Mr. Jackson, lies in its genius for 1 . As long as we can | many met new waves bombers and fighters crossing the straits to continue the unremitting assault on the Atlantic wall,
SUSPECT IN THREAT T0 WNUTT SEIZED
The bombers returning from Gerof medium
(Continued From Page One)
was an economist and sald he wanted to go to Arizona, but was being denied the proper papers by the manpower commission. Officials said Zaden appeared: at the social security building about two weeks ago, threatened McNutt over the building telephone and then started for the commissioner's fifth-floor office. He was stopped before he got in, and promptly ushered out.
PLOESTI CAPACITY |
Rabaul area four times Friday
Later he appeared at another
REDUCED BY 75%
(Continued From Page One)
dropping 52 tons of bombs on Tod pera and Lakunai airdromes and bivouacs. One plane was lost. Navy Ventura search planes, from Aleutian bases, raided Paras mushiro and Shumushu in the = Kurile islands of Japan’s northern empire, while Central Pacifia forces again hit Ponape, 436 mileg east of Truk in the Carolines and | carried out the daily attack om the isolated enemy positions in the = Marshalls, }
Sevastopol Under Heavy Air Attacks
MOSCOW, May 8 (U. P). — The Russian air force was revealed lash night to have stepped up its ate tacks on : in apparenf preparation for a ground offensive to smash the last German toehold in the Crimea. ;
Japs Start “Kohima
Counter-Offensive
ADVANCED ALLIED HEADs = QUARTERS, KANDY, Ceylon, May
WMC office, demanding coupons for a trip and theatening to unless I get them.”
defense against charges that he had engaged in seditious activities.
>a
I ; : : : ’ is 1 tH yi . 11th : ; There is just about whatever might Ma FEE yt fa 0 nary DEATHS | be in fabrics . . . Poplins and red D ald Wikon, 18. ef S00 x. ew | FAT Brock, 31, a Long, pores! Sissons | i Jersey; tinger, 17; al hemorrhage. : Rayon Failles and Cavalry Twills Indisnapaits. s Witiem F. Slate, ST, at 1445 Broadway, (ra ) and Spun Ra ons Michael F. McGrath, 23, of 1921 B. 19th: | "cerebral hemorrhage. ig ol | oC i o & y . Jean WINs, aeManen, 21, of 3608 N.| genjamin F Hiner, 71, at City, pulmonary and Cotton Twill . . . in solid shades sum “Jones Salirs mw. RR 3, Drees Thomas DAfcy McGee, 1, at 1 E ontr i ; Mary Fran 24, higan, pulmonary abscess. or the plaid top-co asting io erland. Ind. 05. ami Sout noi en Miller, 4%, at City, cerebral . slack brothers . . . the colors are Field; Janet R. Fowler, 33, of 4137 oO hadley, 80, at £717 Allen, carclg swell for summer! 2 23, of 2936 W. Jack-| mina } 1423 Oliver, myo- : : oe W 18, Greencastle, rditis. = Street Floor Emma Mae Cowgill,” 68, at City, intestinal . Lr ankiin Wade, 54, at City, uremia. ; Catherine Gallagher, 54, at 5015 E. Michi.
gan, Anna bral
carcinoma. > > ¥. Baylor. 62, at 2254 Central, cere-| h,~29, at 83¢% N. la
whereabouts.
STRAUSS SAYS: IT'S ONE DAY NEARER VICTORYI
gasoline to Baltimore «kill McNutt|a general counter-offensive along
McNutt is now on vacation and his aids declined to disclose of
8 (U. P.).—Japanese troops, disree garding heavy losses, have opened
the Kohima front in a desperate = attempt to retake the positions cape = tured by British forces last week, it was announced today. 3
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And prices like these h such a combined
