Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 19 June 1944 — Page 2
place Dr. Good Until New Chief Is Found.
College Committee to Re:
Sgt. John W. Chung With . Yank Troops in Carentan >
Sgt. John W. 'mother and brothers *fire experijencing the chaos of war in China, |i fighting with the allies in France. | The 26-year-old native of China, {son of Jung Min Kum of Indian{apolis, was among the Yanks who
An administrative committee has captured Carentan. been. appointed to direct the affairs| After & week of bombardment
of Indiana Central college from July 1, the date Dr. 1. J. Good's fesig-
nation as president becomes effective, until a successor is chosen. Evan R. Kek, treasurer of the
college; Bishop Fred L. Dennis, Dr.
W. P. Morgan, head of the biology department. and the Rev. Roy H. Turley, college pastor, are the committee members. Dr. Good, president of the college pince 1915, resigned to direct the $350.000 endowment drive for York college of York, Neb. Both Indiana Central and York are owned and operated by the United Brethren church
Member of First Class
Dr. Good was a member of the first graduating class in 1908 and
‘and street fighting in Carentan, the {boys found a fairly tame town {when they arrived, according to Willam H. Stoneman, Indianapolis |Tmies and Chicago Daily News foreign correspondent. ] ore Sgt. Chung enlisted in the 1940, he studied chemistry Tech college at Hightroit, Mich., graduatore he entered serv-
army jat Law land Park, ing shortly {ice. He went in September, 1943) | Born in China, h
came to the
Giant Mas Before Firing
SALT LAKE CITY, June 18 (U.!
Sgt. John W. Chung . . . he was at Carentan with the invading Yanks.
erseas to England | United States when he was a child. | His father is an employee at the
Bamboo Inn, 39 Monument Circle.
urderer Dies
uad in Utah
behind a\canvas curtain in a cell-
taught history until 1914 when he |p.) —Hooded and strapped \ firmly | house door \only about 20 feet from
was elected business manager and treasurer. | He lives with his wife at 4202
Otterbein ave. and will continue to died at dawn today before a five- war plant watchman, was divorced|ing information office is to be estab-
| }
to a tiny wooden chair, 38-year-old | | Austin Cox, giant mass murderer,
the death chaic, Cox, ‘a former truck driver and
make his home there. He has three man firing squad against the south early last year by his second wife, children, Mrs. Ranald Wolfe, wife wall of tne ancient Utah state Who charged he threatened to cut
of an army captain stationed in
| prison, |
out her tongue. On {he night of
Florida; Miss Ida Mae Good, a| Five high-powered rifles "barked July 23 he started looking for Mrs.
WAC stationed overseas, and Lowell Good, employed in the engineering department of R. C. A.
RALPH BARD “CITED FOR NAVY PROMOTION
WASHINGTON, June 19 (U. P.). -—Ralph Bard, now assistant secretary of navy, was nominated by
{simultaneously from behind their {canvas curtain in a cellhouse door- | way at 4:42 a. m, Indianapolis time. Cox was pronounced dead three minutes later, just as the morning sun climbed over the towering peaks of the nearby Wasatch mountains. | The heavily-bearded, six-foot four-inch giant killed Ogden District Judge Lewis V. Trueman and
Cox—not knowing she was in a town several miles from her usual home in Ogden. Instead of finding his ex-wife, Cox ran into a group of strangers, blasted at them with his shotgun, killed Mrs. Jane Stauffer, Bessie Brooks, Eliza W. Burton and Sam Nelson -and wounded two others. Then he crossed town, called True-
ODT Urges Less Travel to Chicago During the Conventions. | WASHINGTON, June 19 (U. P.).
are adopting & plan of reserving accommodations for essential travelers, the war production board revealed today as the office of defense fransportation again called upon sightseers and tourists to stay away from Chicago ‘during the national party conventions the weeks of June 26 and July 19. - | The hotel plan, described as the “most practical” yet proposed, was devised by hotel owners in Norfolk, Va., and is now being put into practice in various forms in other congested areas, WPB said.
Five-Day Limit
It provides that no guest shall be allowed to remain in a hotel for more than five days except in case! of extreme emergency. In addition, | each hotel will hold in reserve until! 6 p. m. daily a “reasonable” number | of rooms for essential war travelers. In each locality a central room-!
lished for listing available rooms to which persons may be referred when hotel rooms are exhausted. | WPB described “essential guests” as military personnel who travel on government business, and civilians travelling “in the public interest: either to promote war programs or to provide essential civilian needs.”
| - ‘All They Can Do’ |
ODT Director J. Monroe Johnson told ‘would-be sightseers and visitors to Chicago that the nation's
—Hotel men in war-swollen areas |
President Roosevelt today for pro- four strangers who crossed his path | jurist.
motion to the position of under- last July while Cox was on an enraged hunt for a former wife White House Secretary Stephen who had been given a divorce by T. Parly said Mr. Roosevelt nomi- Trueman.
secretary.
nated Bard on the recommendation |
secretary to full cabinet rank last | none knew which month after the death of Secretary been shuffied last
Prank Knox.
PETER-TITO PARLEY SEEN LONDON, June 19 (U. P.).—Kin
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man from his bed and killed the|r2ilroads “will have all they can. d
Peter of Yugoslavia may meet soon |Presidents of 1500 leading indusThe five riflemen were paid at with Marshal Tito, Yugoslay partisan trial concerns to join in the ODT’s of Secretary of Navy James V. For- least $25 each, but only four fired leader, somewhere in the Mediter-| Program to cut down nonessential restal, who was raised from under- live ammunition. The fifth gun— ranean area to discuss means of| travel and thus relieve the nation’s because they had uniting his country in the struggle overloaded transportation system. night—contained against the Germans, it was re- a TT a blank. The men had fired from! ported unofficially today.
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PERISHABLE CHEESE NO LONGER RATIONED
| WASHINGTON, June 19 (UP)— |Ration-free sale of all perishable, /cheese except American cheddar, {cheddar products and others in| {OPA group I began today under an loffice of price administration order | designed to take advantage of a pe{riod when soft cheese stocks will {be at the highest level of the year.! | until July 2, no ration points will | be required for Group II cheeses, | including cream cheese and creamed cottage cheese, or group III cheeses, {which include swiss, limburger, | camembert, brick, edam and oth-| ers. They comprise about 28 per {cent of all cheese sold. | | Point values for these cheeses will | |be restored for the four-week pe{riod beginning July 2, OPA said. “The group II and III cheeses are being made point-free solely to prevent waste and spoilage in producers’ or dealers’ hands,” the announcement said. “These cheeses are perishable and must be sold and | eaten soon after they are made.” |
‘SHARE-YOUR-NURSE’ DRIVE ORGANIZED
To relieve the present eritical | shortage of nurses, the Central District Nursing Service bureau, with | | headquarters in room 82¢ of the
{Chamber of Commerce building, is! | launching en July 1 a “share-your; | | nurse” campaign. Primary objective of the plan is | to induce hospital patients employ- | |ing private nurses to share them | | with other patients in the same! {hospital when the amount of atten- | {tion they require permits such | (sharing. In some instances, it was | pointed out today by Miss Mary! | Heckard, -president of the central | {district of the Indiana State | | Nurses association, which sponsors | the nursing bureau, this would per- | mit a nurse to care for two or |three patients instead of only one. | In many instances, she added, it | would relieve the nurses of the con-
| tinuous strain of work 12 hours | |instead of eight. She added that | the number of registered nurses | now on the bureau’s rolls is 260 as | compared with roughly twice that | number a year ago. | Miss Heckard, who is also super- | | visor -of Riley hospital, explained | that the Indiana State Nurses asso- | ciation is affiliated through the | American Nurses association with | | similar organizations in other states | operating bureaus for registration | of trained nurses.
Son Replaces Father in Pulpit
FT. WORTH, Tex. June 19 (U. P.).—Son replaced father today as pastor of the First Baptist church "as Rev. J. Frank Norris, colorful preacher and evangelist who had held the pulpit more than 30 years, stepped down and his son, Rev. George Norris, || ‘moved up from the associate pas-~ torship. : Young Norris, 28, became one of the city’s youngest major church pastors after serving as assistant to his father for two and onehalf years. .
The elder Norris said he plans
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* HELP IS
4 FOR S
(Continued
to the WFA ® the men in « native govern anteed six 1 United States. &. The worker perience and are transports Miami, Fla, ¢ oy contractors,
per day is re native country Each group and camp le ing as a go-be and the contr So far the } heard only their work. “They're no § polite farm | ers,” one offic They range They eat a
1 such as rice,
Many bring with them a playing and s work is done.
STUDY | ~ AGCIDE
