Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 30 May 1944 — Page 7
'n Atlantic Action; Sqf. n Lost Over Europe DIGGER LUSSES O ; EET. : : 2 zr Aa ot (Continued From Page One) E ¥ g N yt awa e | z , " (Continued From Page One) Is als force has been be | placed wreattis in honor of the na- for us. | E 4 ; medal meritorious service in| Pa |" To the soldiers who fell on the cially designed invasion weapons aerial flight while participating in| tion's warrior dead. ; & i : battlefields in the Philippines and and troops trained in their use has sustained enemy action. . It was a solemn observance by a, .,. «anonvmous heroes who lie! . | sgt. Pratt, husband of Mrs. Edith generation that has seen two world,» = 0 SURE FOND PELL |erossed the Atlantic to the Euro« bas been on’ active sea. duly shee 1 + 2 : K. Pratt, 3024 N. Capitol ave, and wars in its time. Together, they “a grateful people will remember | PAP theater without the loss of a then. % : ¥. : son of Mr. and Mrs. Raymond have taken the lives of more than you forever. When the day ot single ship or man, it can be re3 / . ; Pratt, 1110 N. Olney st. is now | 173,000 Americans—126,000 in world liberation comes we will not forget.” | vealed today. 3 His parents are Mr. and Mrs. : tlisted as missing im action. {war I and 47,000 thus far in world In Prederick, Md. former Gover- Boiarineh Half = 1| Virgil Rogers, 1143 E. 10th st. He was serving as an engineer war IL. For John A. SWlle of Thinks, hab] is : : z i a with a B-2¢ Liberator heavy] At Arlington, Lt. Col. Richard =~ ° 0 oh Legion's com. | Dearted ‘and wholly unsuccessful i i Fe " bombardment group and worked at Park, military aid, will lay the) ittee on world war II veterans’ | thrusts at the convoy. Every atATER 0) gh Allsion division of General Motors President's wreath on the tomb of | i , , tack was detected and beaten off Oral Sherman Robert Stockwell James Watson William Rogers |, being inducted in January, the Unknown Soldier in solemn | EEIAtIoN, declared that the day nila . dedicated not only to “thos i ul s Missing Missing Killed Missing 1943, ceremonies beginning at 11 a. m.| wpe Dat Sy hase before & codla nfs damage.
: {who' slumber” but to “those have, The size of the convoy cannot be # 2 = Lt. Col. Edward M. Hudgins of the ve: to sleep.” He said t TR been missing since- May 12 over| killed Saturday in a plane crash {yet . he na i the property be either placed under .
near Bracken : iH-| ths on the tomb {revealed. Besides the invasion x. He was. 30. 8. SGT. WALTER E. OLAUGH army will lay wrea {must be prepared forever against control and ownership of Purdue, France. Stationed he Ray Tex. | LIN, a B-24 gunner in the Buropean of the unknown Civil war soldieT pi re attacks by maintaining a 3m, it brought men trained in the turned over to the state conserva- On May 11 the 26-year-old airman, was the son of Mrs. Olive Wat- theater, has returned to Miamijand the monument to the Confed- | gtrong army and navy ‘without com- | use of others of the united nations’ tion department, or maintained as wrote his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ed-| gon 1619 E. 62d st. Beach, Fla. for re-assignment and erate dead, and Lt. Robert Myers paint against the money cost.” secret weapons. s memorial to the Ade family. He|of the National Malleable and Steel 1 Stotkwell, 3019.5. Ewing ot.| Ns wearing the air medal and the of the navy will decorate the; { The convoy contained every type directed, however, that it be kept| castings Co. Hong he had completed his 22d | 8.22 purple heart. {Spanish war memorial and the, DOGS CAUSE COURT ACTION of ship, and the cargo was equally intact and that the Hazelden coun-| po... Y 28. 1941, three gat mission. . THE WAR DEPARTMENT today, Son of Mr. and Mrs. L. M. Wilson, monument to officers and men of| HOLLYWOOD, hat 30 ne —_ Tariec. One oy carried some “ try club receive 60 acres of the 4 1 bing } jce.| confirmed th i rt that|1638 Towa st, and husband of Mrs. the U. S. S. Maine. | Mrs. Susanne de orras Riosico, the oldest re weapons as we estate to further its organization. ks after the Japs attacked Peart] He' has igh i 1 is n the air| Js EP 2 {Betty Jane O'Laughlin, he spent 22, Later, Senator Tom Connally opera singer and music teacher, was as arms fresh from the proving Other beneficiaries of the estate Sash py graduy ad tom gun. S51, Seo pe Be 5 Ewe stationed pu aaa A RO ovary | mODLhS overseas and was wounded (D, Tex), a veteran of both the charged in municipal Sak: today Sous. Ba for og Weather Included Mrs. Warren T. McCray, : : Bers, as {during a raid on.Bremen. | Spanish-American and the first with keeping vicious and dangerous an e ineffective submarine atthe author's sister; his nieces and went overseas in October, 1043. Monroe, La., and William Stockwell pl, was wounded in action in the
matines) During the attack his oxygen in world wars, will deliver an address dogs at her West Los Angeles home. tacks, the crossing was uneventful. nephews; the. heirs of Joseph W. & = » sap ooper with the es. Mediterranean theater. the plane froze and he lost con- | - ere st mien tee tte rr tee et. Sp — Reeve, formerly his secretary, and! FIRST LT. ROBERT STOCK- s =» = z= = = * | sciousness, falling out of the turret.
Miss Kate Krue, his housekeeper WELL, husband of Mrs. Margaret| * SECOND LT. JAMES W! WAT-| 8 SGT. ARTHUR O. PRATT, When his heated gloves came loose for 20 years. A. Stockwell, 2113 S. State ave, has! SON, bomber pilot instructor, was! serving somewhere in Italy with the he froze his hands and suffered]
— third degree burns his arkle. | TERRI EH I ET TR AT EE A ET TET ERE TORT ER ERE RE ERT I SHR TR THE | Hegre Dns on Ib male
¥
=|He attended Decatur Central higit| ; Ej xchool. » ” ”
T. SGT. ROLLA LEE PATION| of the marine corps has been| killed in action. He is the son of Mrs. Alta F. Patton, Bloomington.
1 1H
118
TEM HOOSIERS from outside] Indianapolis have been wounded in| action in the Mediterranean the-! ater. | They are Pvt. Robert H. Bard, son | of - Mrs. Lenna P. Bard, Michigan | | City; Cpl. William H. Brown, hus-| band of Mrs. Laura Brown, Spener; Pfc. Harold D. Holmes, brother | f Mrs. Mary E. Loucks, Wakarusa; pl. Stanley M. Jarosz, son of Mrs. | ary Jarosz, Gary; Sgt. Walter E.| ottka, son of Mrs. Mollie Kottka,| niamac; Sgt. William L. Marks, | n of Mrs. Eliza S. Marks, Goshen; . Herbert T. Moore, hushand of rs. Mary J. Moore, Richmond; enneth Riddle, son of Mrs, Little iddle, Marion; Pvt. Albert E. mith, son of Mrs. Fannie E. Smith, | ersailles, and Pvt. Ray E. Stamps, | rother of Mrs. Gertrude England, ublin.
ARCTIC BATTLE The Young Soldiers WON BY ALLIES | Archibald MacLeish
The young soldiers do not speak.
} Nevertheless they are heard in the still U-Boats Licked on Supply houses.
. ? Route to Russia by (Who has not heard them?)
British Fleet. They have a silence that speaks for them |
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By LEO S. DISHER And when the clock counts.
United Press Staff Correspondent (Representing the eombined United States Press)
~~ They say,
LONDON, May 30—The British) We were young. We havedied. Remember us, eet has gunned and bombed its |
fl way to mastery of the Arctic all the |
; They say, way to Russia and for the last 100 We have done what we could days has been sweeping, free from
ut until it is finished it is not done. attack, to the very shadow of Nor- B finished it Br t
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way as an invasion prelude. They say, Ir pave Just selursiad from. four We have given our lives reader ee But until it is finished no one can know | combined American press and I am what our lives gave. Thése are first {convinced the allies have won the The quality 340 needle battle of the Arctic as conclusively | y say, hose aa youll Sas that of the Atlantic. Our deaths are not ours.
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assaults on shipping have been They will mean what you make them. smashed; German plane attacks, and fashionable. Choice of to 42.
at least temporarily, have ceased! Th 3 ey say, completely; and the German sur-| LL © . two popular = face navy has been hammered until Whether our lives and our deaths were for colors in sizes it is questionable if it now consti- peace and a new hope 83 to 10's, tutes more than a feeble threat, Or for nothing
Effectiveness Dwindles We cannot say.
On supply routes, which only al It is you who must say this. year ago were so filled with U-boats|
that “torpedoes ran in grooved tracks,” German effectiveness has {
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We leave you our deaths, marines sunk outnumber allied ship, Give them their meaning, losses.
The British now use tactics like| Give them an end to the war and a true those employed in the Atlantic pro- | beace,
tecting shipping with aircraft car-| Give them a victory that ends the war and riers plus escorts and sometimes
making runs without a single loss. | . ¢ peace afterwards, Meanwhile carrier-borne and R.! Give them their meaning. A. F. attacks on the Germans’ Nor- | wegian bases and coastal supply | We were young, they say. lines have been increased during the! R ber us . last 60 days to the highest pitch] emember *
of the war. { (Courtesy of Free World Magazine.) Officers of the British fleet now |
{are awaiting possible participation Tr Dig Pkg {in the western invasion and they are as impatient as the man in the
street. “A PLEDGE FOR PEACE"
‘DEATH TOLL NOW 4 | Tee Iisa Commitee for Victory believes that, if the return of war is to prevented, IN WHITING BLAST the United States must take a leading part in WHITING, Ind, May 30 (U. P). the development of an international organiza—The death toll reached four today tion which shall seek by peaceful means to after an explosion during secret ex- : solve the problems arising out of international periments with fiame - throwing relationships. In this election the issue of
equipment and an army tank at the international co-operation transcends all do-
Stanard OF Co's Whiting refiriery| mestic issues and party politics. proving ground. Three persons were
hurt. Therefore, irrespective of our political affili_The victims were 8. K. Ovitz, 62, ations, we pledge ourselves to support for | J. J. Mellis, 40, and John Henusin; | §— — : National Office only 2 lidates who 5, oil of wal ing, and Don Leopard | stand “unequivocally for effective American ni OR, Se participation in an international organization ment of the company, Ovitz being with power to enforce its decisions. in charge of the division at the| j§- . ? Whiting plant, Henusin, forman in the engineering laboratory, died
several hours after the mishap in : : THIS an he iy TH wd’ PRESIDENT sible vit ROGERS & CO.
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