Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 27 May 1944 — Page 2
G. O. P. bosses have same feeling. Who would it be, then?
likely Republican dark horse.
Roosevelt of electoral votes. South
A Weekly Sizeup by the Washington Staff of the Scripps-Howard Newspapers
(Continued From Page One) theyre over their Willkie jitters, One seasoned Republican veteran is laying bets* he won't be nominated. Bricker leaders, still trying to build up interest in their candidate, make the point that if Dewey gets the nomination too easily he'll be so independent it'll be tough to deal with him. Some of the state
Public-opinion polls show no close runners-up in popular favor. Democrats probably would make frantic effort to draft Gen. Marshall, who is not interested. Taft seems most
All of which is the latest gossip about the candidates, which we pass along for whatever it may be worth.
New Dealers Worry About South
NEW DEALERS lose sleep worrying about bizarre anti-fourth-term move in South which might cost them southern electoral-college votes, even if heavy popular vote is cast for them. Already South Carolina and Texas have taken steps to deprive
Carolina convention announced it
would not name presidential electors until it saw whether Democratic nominees and platform suited it. Texas named electors but provided
that if national convention refused to seat its uninstructed delegates, and refused other specified measures, then electors might vote for some other Democrat for President. It has been routine for electors to vote for candidates getting popular majority in their states, but constitution does net bind them to do so. In a tight race, switch by a few from Roosevelt to some other Democrat might throw election into house of representatives.
The fine hand behind this elaborate plot is former Rep. John J. O'Connor, eastern vice chairman of “American Democratic national committee,” an anti-fourth-term organization. O'Connor is the only Democrat F. D. R. succeeded in defeating in the 1938 “purge.” = "
Soldier Vote
WAR AND NAVY officials, dubious earlier of their ability to handle state ballots for servicemen, have now assured congress they have the job licked. Only exceptions: Soldiers at posts at which there is no communication; those whose ballots are misdirected and -cannot be re-sent in time. Ballgts have been given No. 1 air-mail priority. = » POST-WAR WORLD: Pilotless airplanes will carry freight across Atlantic, a leading British radio scientist predicts. Planes will fly on selected rofites and operators at land stations will guide them. Dr. R. L. Smith-Rose, who first talked of pilotless freight planes in London, is now in this country.
NOTE: Office of Scientific Research and Development, headed by Dr. Vannevar Bush, has asked congress for more money for its radar division than for any other branch of research: hinted it can be put to many more uses than have so far been announced. n - sn
OTHER RECENT OSRD triumphs: Perfection of fuel for field stoves which will burn without givirig off light, disclosing positions of men,
Perfection of electrical device to aim. anti-aircraft guns automatically—and instantly,
Progress toward perfection of vaccine for dysentery, improvement in cholera vaccines. Discovery of insecticides to be applied to walls of a building or clothing which for days, and even weeks, will kill insects touching them. It protects against malarial mosquito and typhus-car-ryving louse.
Rationing
OPA INSIDERS, themselves baffled by recent modification of meat rationing, predict some of the cuts that are now point-free will be back on rationing by July. Highly unfavorable reaction to
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Post-War Aviation
WAY THE SENATE commerce committee, studying post-war aviation, handled London reports that Assistant Secretary of State Berle had made too many promises to the British is tip-off on senate determination not to let administration run away with the ball. Mr. Berle was cleared, but the incident is interpreted as a warning to Russians and British, heading into similar meetings with U. 8. on aviation, that congress can still hold the club as in league of nations fight.
SENATOR McKELLAR is said to be ready to quit fighting for his anti-TVA amendments if the house votes them down next Thursday. He admits this is likely, consoles himself with support from senate colleagues.
Pre-Victory Building
ANTICIPATING improved conditions in materials, national housing agency is mapping “previctory” building program which will seek alleviation of overcrowding in most critical centers, provide dwellings .for families rated nonessential in war industry. Present program, confined to units for essential in-migrant war workers, is now “over the hump,” officials say. - ” ~ ARMY HAS ordered service commands to streamline “overhead” installations; current closings of reception centers are to be followed by other consolidations of training establishments, supply depots.
" - »
Super Radio Plants
THREE SUPERPOWER shortwave transmitters (200 kilowatts) will go into operation about June 1 under office of war information
management. Built by Crosley Corp., they are world’s, most powerful, can beam programs
anywhere in the world.
$1,222,000.
Cost.
5 ” » ARMY PROCUREMENT officials, at request of house military affairs committee, are investigating a report that “surplus” women's nylon stockings were sold for 5-cents a pair at a Texas post. » ”
BIG NAMES of radio are in demand to “cover” party conventions for news syndicates. Already signed up: Gracie Allen.
rent from the battery, carried in a small hand case, is turned on and off by the thumb with a switch on the handle. Electrical connections through plugs on the end of the sleeve break automatically when the case is set down.
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[New Presbyterian Moder
ator to. Be Honored Today in Chicago. (Continued From Page One)
the newest enterprises of the church, the committee on post-war rehabilitation and reconstruction, which works within the wartime service commission, is directed by Dr. Sharp. Dr. Milner, as president of the board of national mis|sions, will address the general assembly Monday and Tuesday. Although Dr. George Arthur Frantz, pastor of the First Presbyterian church, Indianapolis, is not pres ent, the report of the board of Christian education, on which he has served for many years, will be read.
Speaks on C. B. 8S.
The Indianapolis friends of Dr. Vale will hear his first sermon as new moderator tomorrow at 9 a. m. over the C. B. 8. “Church of the Air.” Dr. Vale will carry forward a Presbyterian tradition when he preaches at morning worship later at the Fourth Presbyterian church here, the host church to the general assembly. It was in this stately Gathic edifice, with its groined arches and stained glass windows, that he was unanimously elected moderator on Thursday. This afternoon, the general assembly and Chicago friends of Dr, Vale will gather on the campus of McCormick seminary for a reception at which Dr. and Mrs. Vale will be honored guests. Dr. Sharp said the post-war rehabilitation and reconstruction committee, in its meetings here, has been attempting to foresee some of the emergencies that will be ineviteble with the coming of peace. Above all, the committee hopes to assist service men to regain their former jobs or find new ones, to complete their education if necessary and to readjust economically to civilian life.
To Provide Training
Many of the marriages made In haste during the war will be inclined to fall apart afterward, the committee fears. It will, accordingly, seek to provide training for Presbyterian ministers so that they will be equipped to give needed
Pvt. James Stafford, husAlberta R. Stafford, in the Southwest
OTHER HOOSIERS reported killed in action are: In the
dorf, R. R. 1, Clay City; Sgt. Donald L. Moore, son of Mrs. Mae Moore, Seymour; S. Sgt. Henry F. Reedy, son of Mrs. Maggie Pearl: Reedy, Terre Haute; T. Sgt. Robert E. Smith, husband of Mrs, Ruth J. Smith, Walkerton; S. Sgt. Vail 8. Wolfe, son of Walter 8. Wolfe, Linton; T. Sgt. Ivan M. Wright, husband of Mrs. Helen M. Wright, Hammond. In the Mediterranean area—Pvt. Robert W. Groh, husband of Mrs. Clara B. Groh, Bluffton; 2d Lt. Louis G. Lind, son of Mrs. Margaret P. Lind, Edinburg; Pvt. George W. Mulligan, son of Michael W: Mulligan, Hammond; S. Sgt. Kenneth W. Runyan, son of .Mrs. Cora Runyan, Clinton; T. Sgt. Samuel Schankerman, brother of Abe Schankerman, South Bend; Sgt. Robert D. Smith, son of Mrs. Rose Smith, Kendallville. In the Southwest Pacific—T. 5th Gr. Adolph A. Verstraete, husband of Mrs. Lora Mae Verstraete, South Bend.
THE NAVY DEPARTMENT reported today that Gunner's Mate 3-c Thomas Francis Hall, .son of Mr. and Mrs. Maurice Hall, Mt.
Dog Contest Sef For Tuesday at Tomlinson Hall
counsel in complicated family situations. Provision is being made for re-| turning chaplains to receive re-|
fresher courses and for their re-|
listic work; for a vast building program in America and on the mission field; for the inauguration of industrial chaplains, and to ease the tensions between racial groups and between employers and workers. The board of national missions, of which Dr. Milner is the president, conducts work in 48 states including the West Indies and Alaska. It has under its direction 7200 different missionary operations carried fon by 3700 workers who are con|versant in 64 different langauges 'and dialects.
| Mayer Chapel Praised
Mayer Chapel, a neighborhood in Indianapolis which is a social serv-
location in churches or in evange-| :
“2 In Action
Over Romania
Vernon, and Chief Stofekeeper Verie Louis Jameson, husband of Mrs. Katherine Opal Jameson, South Bend, have been wounded in action. :
” tJ » - PFC. WILLIAM E. VAHEY, Eas Chicago, has been awarded the army silver star for gallantry in action at New Georgia, Solomon Islands. The citation said that when Pfc. Vahey's section sergeant and squad leaders were wounded, he took charge of and directed the operation of the two machine guns in his section for
the balance of the engagement.
THE DISTINGUISHED FLYING CROSS has been awarded to the following Hoosiers: 2d Lt. Forrest J. Eherénman, Warsaw; T. Sgt. Dennis J. Buis, Fillmore; T. Sgt. Leo A. Chruby, East Chicago, who has. been reported missing in action since March 13; 8. Sgt. Frederick H. Belcher, Bloomington; S. Sgt. Ralph H. Jones, Marion, and S. Sgt. Robert C. Vickroy, Cloverdale, E J n » IN THE SOUTHWEST PACIFIC the air medal has been presented to S. Sgt. Edward Nowack, South Bend; S. Sgt. Royal E. Rothrock, Elkhart,
and 8. Sgt. Willard A. Holloway, Fairmount.
S. SGT. EVERETT E. AGAN, son of Mrs. Grace M. Agan, Lebanon, has received the distinguished flying cross and the air medal for participating in more -than 200 hours of combat missions over Burma, Thailand and the Andaman islands. » » ; = AN OAK LEAF CLUSTER in lieu of an additional air medal has been awarded 1st Lt. Willard N. Clary, Lucerne, serving in the South Pacific.
NAZIS EXPECTED TO ABANDON ROME
(Continued From Page One)
ning sooner than previously had been planned.
The Stockholm correspondent of
the London Daily Telegraph said the German people were being told that the battle for Rome, “now nearing a decision, will probably be the signal for an allied invasion from the West co-ordinated with a Russian offensive from the East.” Radio Berlin attributed the collapse of German defenses in Italy
te
i SR Colonel K . . . prize springer
CLOSE COMPETITION is expected in the Memorial Day Obedience Sweepstakes at Tomlinson hall Tuesday. Two dogs who tied for first in the Detroit show last year with scores only one point less than the possible maximum are competing this year. In the runoff after the tie Sally of Duckenfield, an English springer spaniel, lost by one point to Princess B. Wilhelmina, a doberman pinscher, who made a perfect score,
ice project of the Second Presby- | terian church, was cited today by { Dr: E. Graham Wilson, general secretary of the board, as “one of the outstanding pieces of Presbyterian neighborhood house work in {the country.” Mr. Peterson, in speaking of his | work on the board of pension, today said the board is the first insurance agency in the United States. It was organized in 1717 to {provide old-age security for retired | Presbyterian ministers and furnish |a pattern for all subsequent insurance organizations in our country. The general assembly voted today to indorse the movement to lestablish a permanent American [committee on a world council of churches and passed a motion asking the government to furnish support for conscientious objectors to war engaged in civilian public service.
Mrs. Viola Bailey Wins Florist Prize
ney, was chosen today as one of the six winners in a nation-wide contest for the best statements
on “What Flowers Mean to Me in Wartime” The contest was sponsored by the Florists Telegraph Delivery association. Her statement was: “A flower prayer: Oh God, we thank Thee for the sunshine, the rain, the beautiful flowers. In all nature we see Thee. Help us who love the beautiful and are seeking to brighten the world with flowers to be pure in heart. May our lives radiate Thy spirit, as do the flowers we love. Amen.”
‘TEST FORTRESSES ‘WITH 2 ENGINES OUT
SEATTLE (U. P.).—Necessity for “coming in on a wing and a prayer” is always a possibility for pilots of Flying Fortresses in battle zones so Boeing aircraft company engi- | neers have simulated the condition in flight tests to make sure the ships can do the trick. Making flights with only two motors operating are a “must” part of flight tests given the big four-motored
i
Mrs. Bailey
hg
MRS. VIOLA C. BAILEY, Rom- |
Toska V. Clarehoff. another | doberman, and Colonel K. a springer, are two of the dogs being shown by local owners. Toska is owned by Clarence C. Alexander, R. R. 5, box 550, trainer for the Indianapolis Obedience Training club which is sponsoring the show. Colonel K. is owRpd by Mrs. Felix E. Spratt, 2116 Central ave.
» - » During the competition which starts at 10 a. m. there will be many obedience tests such as seeking lost articles, coming to heel, and halting on command, most of which is done by verbal command. The contest closes at 6 p. m. and dogs will be benched when not competing sp that they can be seen by spectators. Frank M. Douthitt; president of the club, emphasized that it was an amateur group and that all profits would be turned over to the Crossroads Sheltered
' Workshop which aids the crippled.
PREFERS HOME TO
{to the German command's refusal ¢ to divert troops massed in western
| Europe to a “minor theater of war.” Nazis Refuse ‘Bait’
| “By withholding reserves in west‘ern Europe,” Berlin said, “the Ger!man command is keeping its full | freedom of movement. On the {other hand, every day of the south{ern Italian campaign weakens the {power of the opponent. “In the German camp, it is quite i clear that the enemy is very anxious [to see 20 or more German divisions |start an attack today or tomorrow {and throw him back to the Garigliano and even to Naples or farther, if only this would bring about a noticeable weakening of the Ger{man anti-invasion forces. “On no account will reinforce{ments be sent from the West. Not |even the gigantic Russian summer {offensive, which soon will be initiated, will change this decision of the German leaders.” Both Britain and Germany ordered further cuts in train service today as a step toward clearing railway lines for essential military {trafic in connection with the invasion and subsequent battles.
Cheap Fares Curtailed
| British railways announced that cheap fare railway journeys for the wives of British, Dominion, colonial land allied servicemen would be curtailed drastically beginning June 1, “due to the need for a progressive reduction in passenger services.” A Madrid dispatch to the London Daily Sketch told of the latest re{duction in train service in Germany. All passenger travel in western Germany, presumably as far north as Denmark, has been banned frqm June 1 and inhabitants of Hamburg, Bremen, Essen, Dusseldorf and Cologne were warned to be prepared to go inland on 30 minutes notice, the dispatch said.
WINNING MEDALS CHICKEN BORN WITH
SONWAY, Ark. (U.P)—M. Sgt.| {Guthrie Woolly. wrote his” parents, (Mr. and Mrs. A. M. Woolly of
FOUR DRUMSTICKS
COLUMBIA, Mo. (U. P.).—There
| Greenbrier, that he had received shouldn't be any family fight over
the gold star for combat in a major battle, pre-Pearl Harbor service
and Européan theater pins,
and hear the sound of a cow bell.”
| Who gets the “drumsticks” when a chicken recently hatched at the
| ribbon, good conduct, North African! Farm Service center here is served
tat the dinner table, The chicken,
| “But,” wrote Woolly, “I don’t care hatched with an extra pair of legs, ‘about any more medals and honors. has four toes on each of two front {~~ . All I want is to ge back home
|legs and two toes on each of the spare pair,
Report Drug Ergotamine
Eases Battle Strain, Shock
(Continued From Page One)
|medical officer, Merchant Marine Rest Care Center, S8ands Point, Long | Island. :
In trying to rehabilitate men
{who were incapacitated by battle
fatigue Dr. Heath made 8xhaustive tests with every known seda(tive, as well as the induced-sleep treatments, to no avail. Faced with the desperate need for getting these men back to sea, he remembered certain tests he had made with a derivative of ergot, a drug used primarily for obstetric cases, called ergotamine tartrate. Results of his first tests with the drug on men were unbelievably successful, although it produced no reaction on strictly. mental cases.
‘ness, upset stomach, and br heart action to normal of battle fatigue, Fearful lest the eure by a more serious reac
It eliminated all shaking, nervous-
the results were merely temporary, he made extensive tests in the eight rest centers maintained by WSA and the maritime commission in co-operation with the U.S. public health service,
Months of study revealed that only persons with hardening of the arteries and chronic liver troubles could not be safely given the drug, but that its cures were permanent and no evil effects followed.
It is taken by mouth or injected in’ the blood-stream for Hore action. There is an adequate supply for maritime commission needs and probably for any demand by the army, if their tests are equally as successful, ; Experiments with ergotamine tartrate are too new to reveal all ramifications for its use, but it is
rank among the sulfa drugs and
it of medicine,
considered possible that it might|
penicillin as contributing to the|
Escape Road for 17 Divisions. 2a at (Continued From Page One)
southeast of Rome. Another 5th army column, advancing along the Appian way from Cisterna, was within three miles of Velletri. New gains were recorded all along the 70-mile front by’ the 5th and 8th armies, and reconnaissance reports indicated the enemy was pulling back in all sectors in an attempt to escape a frap. The retreat at the extreme southeastern end of the front near Mt. Cairo was becoming disorganized, field reports said.
Keemle: How Can Nazis Abandon Rome ?
(Continued From Page One)
vehicles destroyed in the last three days. The battle of annihilation which the allied command seeks may yet be fought in the hills below Rome. The e has been nothing revolutionary in the combat combination which the allies have used to smash the elaborate mountain defenses which the Germans spent months in perfecting. In essence it is Nath@én Bedford Forrest's phil. osophy of “getting there fustest with the mostest.” In order to have manpower this offensive in Italy has been primarily a job for the classic combination of artillery. and infantry. The French provided two experienced mountain divisions which carried out brilliantly the job of prying the Germans out of the mountains between the two vital sectors of Cassino and the coastal strip. The allies never had troops before to make such an attack.
Wealth of Armor
Gen. Alexander had a wealth of | artillery and heavy tanks to be employed the moment the drive penetrated into tank country. The western front is going to be on an entirely different scale from the Italian campaign. It will in-
5th 21, Miles From Last
SECOND LT. PATRICIA THOMPSON, 1034 N. Tibbs ave. is a member of a 5th air force medical unit that was the first to participate in the aerial evaguation of wounded after the recent invasion of Hollandia in New Guinea. ARTHUR E. HUBERT, husband of Mrs. Naomi Hubert, 102 N. Whitcomb st., has been promoted to first lieutenant in England where he is a member of a postal regulating
DROWNING ENDS FIGHT AT CANAL
Mechanic’s Body Recovered After Plunge Climaxes
Struggle on Bank: (Continued From Page One)
James McGuire, 49, 1120 Calhoun st. out of the water,
Call It a Murder
Although Deputy Corner Wesley Ward said the death was due to drowning, detectives added that had he been conscious, McGuire, a good swimmer, would have been able to get out, So they called it a murder,
Described by neighbors this morning as “one of the best mechanics in town,” McGuire left the afternoon shift at the Zenite Metal Co, West and Market. He came home, ate dinner with his wife, Mary, and their two daughters,
F |Dionne Girls Mark Annie
hoist
versary of Historic Birth (Continued From Page One)
insists on that.
the quints will be the three children of their guard, J. A. Chalifoux. The Chalifoux children are the girls’ constant companions, and the only children outside the family to
the equivalent of a convent education is given, with classes conducted
study, and Dionne, who for many years was adamant against it, now hopes that his children will speak both French and English proficiently.
Worth $1,000,000
The quints, who until they moved in with their family over a year ago had a yearly maintenance bill of $40,000, now are believed to have an estate of $1,000,000 and possibly more. Most of this has com. from postcards, souvenirs, indorsements and a few appearances, Of the five, Marie is considered the charmer, and she is the one who receives the most fan mail Emilie is a mimic, and loves to act. Annette is the student and the musician, although all sing and play the piano easily. Yvonne is considered the leader, and is somewhat motherly toward the rest. Cecile is quiet but observant. * None is a beauty; all are healthy, and despite the fact that at the end of their first week they aver aged less than two pounds apiece,
Betty, 14, and Alice, 11, and told them he was going to a dentist, Night superintendent Breedlove, at the Zenite, said McGuire came around during the evening and asked for a different shift. After that, he is believed to have been with some of his friends at loafing spots in the vicinity of the Zenite.
Was Parachutist Neighbors today also recounted
volve somewhat different problems of attack. It will bring into play an infinitely greater variety of { weapons and attack techniques. i But the old, well-tried, class com- | bination of infantry plus artillery probably will bear the brunt of the) job and they have shown in Italy that they can take the Germans on and lick them.
MILLION SEEDLINGS PLANTED IN TEXAS
P.).—The forest service of Texas A. and M. college reports that nearly
were slash pine.
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McGuire's prowess as a parachute jumper in the years after 1914 when he was in the army. He traveled with a carnival, jumping from a balloon, and appeared at Riverside Amusement park. Neighbors also recalled that years ago McGuire rescued three children from drowning in the Tippecanoe river at Monticello, McGuire has a son, Everett, of 1948 Shelby st., and two other sons in the navy, Harry and Kenneth,
MUNCIE STRIKE OVER
MUNCIE, Ind, May 27 (U. P.).— Departments were fully manned to-
Assn. oan Assn.
Assn.
George |
” Insurance Sav. & Loan Assn. ‘Peoples Mutual Sav. & Loan Assn. Prospect Sav. & Loan Assn. : Railroadmen’s Fed. Sav. & Loan Assn, Shelby St. Fed. Sav. & Loan Assn.
all now are plump, active and | Vigorous,
REPORT RUSS ENVOY IS LEAVING BULGARIA
LONDON, May 27 (U, P.).—Travelers arriving in Turkey said today that the staff of the Soviet embassy in Sofia has begun packing its belongings and making other preparations for departure,
break in relations with Bulgaria. The reports followed close on the expiration Thursday midnight of a purported Soviet ultimatum to Bulgaria to cease her pro-German {activities and coincided with the arrival of German reinforcements in the monarchy.
EASTERN TEACHEER
STORRS, Conn. May 27 (U. P.). —Dr. Vincent Nowliss, assistant professor of psychology at the University. of Connecticut, will leave at
a million forest tree seedlings have day in the Ball Bros. plant after a the end of this semester for Indiana been planted in 48 Texas counties back-to-work movement of approxi- | university, where he will do reduring the last six months. Three- mately 2500 employees who had | search under the committee for refourths of all the seedlings planted struck in protest to the war labor search of the National Research board handling of a wage dispute. council, it was announced today.
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in French. English is a special
COMING TO INDIANA
bration, a dinner with a cake and a small pile of presents for each girl. The presents will remain a | secret until opened; Papa Dionne
In the evening a few friends | may drop in, but there will be no party. The only children visiting
attend the Dionne school. There, under the supervision of two nuns,
perhaps as a prelude to .a Russian :
WASHINGTON . American motori only 43 per cent as he used in 194 the next two ye remain at appro level, according t um Administrator:
LONDON —K his congratulati allied command “notable successe in “exceptionally tion.”
MOSCOW—Sov “and dive-bomber German convoy | Thursday night, ports totaling 15. boat and an escc ously damaged a several other shi . Russian commur
HAMMOND, Spogis had bee February when s infection. A | struck her house her and restored
WESTON, Ce Adams, former umnist and me formation Pleas announced he for state repres
HOLLYWOOD Patrick had a today. A soldie tographed photo a bullet hole in requested a repl dier commented: got me.”
PROVIDENCE workers at the Manufacturing | a mass meeting their walkout in hiring of a wor ~ held by a man, said the strike effective.
BELMONT, tory gardening L. Hill turned his mother lost
CHICAGO—A these days. So plied to Mrs. An ghe didn’t both 4 The new maid X and left with bh money and fou; Gordon told pol
CHICAGO-—-V paid time and o! worked on Men substitute holid ed, Kenneth regional attorne partment of lal
LONDON—N Minister Jose threatened to rage” of Germ allied airmen enemy territ DNB news age
Serv Secretary of Sta
FL, on active duty | in the coming.el
iS. came
-
or precinct to th 1 desire that the
Signature certif To be signed by nny This is t election whic
women will d out Marion ¢
An intensive paign will be | ion county's 78 in the armed s November el¢
at every house
| with those fam
