Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 26 June 1944 — Page 13

W. Atwater Ceremony

at the home of the r, Mrs. Frances w. Maple rd. foltmony. The bride's . O'Rourke, Indianidegroom is the son yer, Boone, Iowa,

White Satin

te entered with her ickney. She wore a vn fashioned with a nd a gathered skirt a train. The sheer seline de sole was seed pearl embroid-

ed fllusion veil was net of orange blosarried a white Bible, legroom, topped with i stephanotis.

ants’ Gowns

of honor, Mrs. Samore a blue georgette ith a fitted bodice kirt. She carried a r bouquet of pink iniym. Jones, the bridesled in a frock styled 1 of honors in pink he carried a similar

[, New Albany, was | the ushers were and Mr. Riggs. SidPratt were flower

ir wedding trip the at home at 215 WwW.

Sigmas tall fficers

picnic and installa. of the Theta Sigma onorary journalism held Friday at the uise Ross Kleinheng,

Stalker will be inlent. Other new of Florence Hers Stone Ruegamer, first and idents; Mrs. Dorothy ut, secretary, and Wilcox, treasurer. * a white elephant rom which will be flower fund. Miss t will assist Mrs,

tings meeting of the Of1b will be tomorrow y Indianapolis Ba: room. The next sesinner meeting July Lincoln.

Rush Party

McCall, 626 N s hostess yesterday amma Tau sorority , William Oliver and assisted.

a

irch Rite |.

Wartime Eating 2 Meta Given

Grapefruit juice (1 No. 3% can—

2 blue pts. Add juice of 1 lime). Ready-to-eat cereal (4 servings). Griddle cakes (serve with jelly or preserves).

Luncheon Buttered green beans (1 1b. fresh). Fried egg sandwiches (8 slices whole wheat bread, 6 eggs). *Chilled strawberry gelatine (1 pkg. * strawberry gelatine. Cut into cubes and serve with chilled custard sauce). Dinner Lamb shanks with vegetables (see recipe). Onion potatoes (2 lbs. potatoes). Leaf lettuce salad (French dress-

ing). Bread (8 slices). Blueberry ple (fresh blueberries). - ® "

Lamb shanks with vegetables: 4

small lamb shanks, 2 thsps. flour, % tsp. celery salt, 1 tsp. salt, pepper, 8 tbsps. shortening, 1 c. water, 1

thsp. catsup, 1 c. fresh lima or Sree}

beans, 1 c. fresh corn Dredge shanks thoroughly with the combined dry Ingredients. Brown or! all sides in hot shortening. Add a few tablespoons of water, cover and simmer for 3 to 2% hours, adding additional water as needed. Add any remaining water, ghe catsup and vegetables during the last 20 minutes of cookfng. 4 servings. ” »

s RATION POINTS FOR WEEK Red

‘Group Hatreds Menace Our Economy’

By MRS. WALTER FERGUSON Scripps-Howsrd Staff Writer WHEN HARRY BRIDGES, C. I. O. leader, warned labor groups they must give up strikes in the postwar era, he showed foresight but he stirred up a hornet’s nest in radical ranks,

With it millions of men and women have won their battle for a living wage and tolerable working conditions. But, of late, with the nation at war strikes have been called for picayunish reasons, such as jurisdictional squabbles and interunion quarrels—for anything and everything.

-|the fleshy part of his back. It was

Veteran of Major Battles Wounded En Route to Cherbourg.

BOURG, June 26 (U. P.)—Richard D. McMillan, United Press war cor-

respondent who has covered major campaigns since the start of the war without a scratch, was wounded in the back by a shell fragment today when a German naval battery laid down a barrage on American positions, killing a sergeant -and wounding several officers. McMillan still was on his feet tonight, treating the whole thing as a joke, aftér going in to Cherbourg and writing a dispatch on conditions inside the city. His shirt is covered with blood and the doctor who examined him believed a fragment was lodged in

a close shave for McMillan because the fragment cut very close to his spine. Big Guns Open Fire

“We went into a field to get the latest news from a battalion headquarters,” McMillan said, “when the Germans turned all their long-range

sss,

Funeral services for Dr. Christopher B. Coleman, director of the Indians Historiical bureau and prominent historian who died yesterday, will be held at 8 p. m. tomorrow at the Flanner & Buchanan mortuary. Dr. E Burdette Backus of the All Souls Unitarian church will officiate. Dr, Coleman, who was 69, died

home, 4314 Central ave, early yesterday—his 43d wedding anniversary. A native of Illinois, Dr, Coleman was ordained to the ministry but devoted his life to history instead. For the last 20 years he was director of the historical bureau and ained national recognition as a writer of historical articles and books. Fosters State Tree

Aside from history, his favorite hobby was his garden. His home has a well-cared-for semi-formal garden in the back yard, containing many rare, imported species. He was an inveterate pipe smoker and a connoiseur of tobacco, treating his extensive collection of pipes | “like babies.” Among his enthusiasms was the tulip poplar, the state tree. He was

guns onto that squadron.

“One shell fell to the left. An-

The strike has become not only a weapon to obtain justice but a bludgeon in the hands of irresponsible men whose misuse of it now threatens the very structure of union labor which has been so painfully built up through the | years. . - J

IT IS FASCINATING to follow the mental] contortions of its mouthpiece, the newspaper PM, which cries for the right of labor to strike and at the same time sees crushing

3% Ib. Cheddar cheese.......... 5 9 lbs. T-bone steak............ 22 Pats ......ocinnnen seseceresses 36 Total ..oociiiiinnn verneencee. 43

Blue 1 No. 2% can grapefruit juice... 1 No. 2% can sliced pineapple... 43 Total ... . 4 Pitting Cherries Inserting the tines of a salad fork into the stem end of a cherry will help make the pit come out easily without tearing the fruit.

Sessa ETIE Tanta an

defeats for freedom in a threatened | resistance of doctors to a socializedmedicine program.

—! We needn't go into the merits of

i

the case. But to any fair-minded observer, one thing seems clear: If

2 we give industrial workers the)

{privilege of getting their way by strikes instead of arbitration, the same privilege must be granted to all other groups. It's easy to see where that sort of {thing eould lead. A halt must be {called sometime, or our economy would collapse. Already there is clear evidence that the nation is torn by group hatreds and these

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hatreds are fostered by agitators, many of whom have no interest except personal gain,

|together; indeed, we must, because {no group can exist without the co{operation and goodwill of other { groups.

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other to the right. {shell fell in the fleld 15 or 20 yards {away. It killed the sergeant beside {me and severely wounded several |officers. I got a shrapnel wound {La the back.

“After receiving medical atten-|

tion, I went down the slope to our {left and found an elaborate Ger{man concrete fort. “I felt my back,” he said, “and there was blood. I was glad it was {blood and not the French cognac IT had in my hip pocket.”

Ration Calendar

MEAT-—Red stamps A8 through | W8 in Book 4 good indefinitely for |10 points each. | CANNED GOODS—Blue stamps {A8 through V8 in Book 4 good in{definitely for 10 points each. | SUGAR—Stamps 30, 31 and 32 In {Book 4.are good indefinitely for § pounds. Stamp 40 in Book 4 good {for § pounds of canning sugar, Applicants applying for canning sugar should send in one spare {stamp 37, attached to the applica(tion for each applicant. GASOLINE—Stamp A-12 is good for 3 gallons and expires Sept. 21. |B3 and C3 and B4 and C4 good for 5 gallons. T good for 5 gallons

| through June 30; E and El good ence of Historical Societies from [for 1 gallon; R and R1 not valid|1938 through 1938 and was a mem- | at filling stations but consumer may

| exchange R for E at his local board if he wishes to purchase non-high-

B, C, D and T coupons are not valid until they have been indorsed in ink

tion number and state. Motorists should write 1944 numbers on book and coupons. FUEL OIL—Period 4 and 5 =oupons valid through Sept. 30. Al changemaking coupons and reserve

automobiles discontinued. Commercial vehicle tire inspection every six months or every 5000 miles. Inspection certificates still will be a requi{site in obtaining replacement tires B card holders sre now eligible for grade 1 tires if they can prove extreme necessity. All A holders are eligible for grade 3 tires, including factory seconds, if they find tires which may be purchased. SHOES—No. 1 and No. 2 “airplane” stamps in Book 3 good Indefinitely.

Then a third.ty of the state and envisioned the

| way gasoline at filling station. st g A. He also belonged to the Contem-|

or pencil with automobile registra- |

{a leader in the movement to have {tulip poplars planted in every coun-

!day when Indiana would be as dis{tinctive for its tulip poplars as Hol{land is for its tulips. {Born in Springfield, Ill, Dr. Coleman received his A. B. degree from | Yale university in 1896, a B. D. degree from the University of Chicago/ {in 1899 and his Ph. D. from Colum- | bia university in 1914.

Professor at Butler

i | In 1504 and 1905 he attended the University of Berlin. He came to Indianapolis in 1900 | and for the next 18 years he was a professor of history at Butler university, Seven of those years he served as the school's vice president. In 1820 he went to Allegheny college as head of the department of {history and political science, but in 1924 he returned as director of the (state historical bureau. Dr. Coleman was secretary of the {Indiana Historical society and di{rector of the state library from 1936 until he resigned in June, 1942. {From 1927 through 1940 he was a member of the George Rogers Clark Memorial commission, and was ex{ecutive secretary of the Clark Ses{quicentennial commission from 1928 through 1838.

Other Affiliations

{| He was secretary of the Confer-

| 1 | |

ber of the American and Mississippi | Valley historical associations, Phi {Beta Kappa and Delta Kappa Eplon fraternities.

porary club, the Indianapolis Literary club and the Woodstock | Country club. He was on the board {of advisers for the Children's museum. Among his literary works were the following books: “Church History in the Modern Sunday School”; “Constantine the Great, Historical, Legendary and Spurious”; “Memoirs of Louis Harrison Coleman,” and “Indiana—1779-1929." His most recent work was a pamphlet, “The United States at

Dr. Coleman, State Historian, Dies onWedding

following & heart attack at his|

Anniversary

Dr. Christopher Coleman

THEATER SAFE OPENED The safe and cash box in the Tal-

T0 HEAR SGHRIGKER

Times Special PEKIN, Ind, June 26 —Pekin’s 112th annual July 4 celebration next

; Tuesday will feature a memorial

service for Southern Indiana's

world war II dead, an address by| Governor Schricker and a horse-|

show.

+ o i Believed to be the oldest perpetu- Macaw in its cage along with a box |

ated affair of its kind in the mid-| west, the Independence Day observance, held at the Gill brothers 18-acre grove here, will be underscored this year by the roaring of planes flying in echelon from Free-| man field, Seymour. Evangelist O. W. Scott of Borden will supervise the morning memorial | services for Southern Indiana heroes. Servicemen from Nichols | General hospital, Louisville, Gov-| ernor Schricker and other armed |

And GOP Loses Her Vote

By Seripps-Howard Newspaper Alliance CHICAGO, June 26.—The Repub-

lican party might as well give up any hope.it had of getting the vote of Mrs. William H. Walters of Kankakee, “TIL Mrs. Walters, carrying her pet

of her new tomato plants which she

intends to transplant in her sister's garden in Detroit, arrived today at the Stevens hotel, headquarters for the Republican convention. Across the reservation slip for her room was stamped, “Taken by Republicans,” and at the end of her bus ride from Kankakee that was all Mrs. Walters needed. “This,” she said to the clerk, “is very bad.” “But, lady,” said the clerk, “don’t

more important than nominating a President?” “Electing one,” replied Mrs. Walters in anger. “Besides, I'm a Democrat.” “Lady,” replied the clerk, “if you want a room youre wrong in four

places. In the first place, you are lin the wrong city. In the second Iplace, you are in the wrong hotel. In the third piace, there are no rooms, anyway. And in the fourth place, I'm a Democrat myself.”

COPENHAGEN UNDER BAN STOCKHOLM, June 26 (U. P).— The Swedish Telegraph agency reported in a dispatch from Copenhagen that the Germans had ime posed a virtual state of emergency

forces members are to be guests at you realize the Republicans are on the city and that effective today

bott Theater, 2145 N. Talbott ave. | were both forced open last night by | thieves, but no money was taken,

a fried chicken picnic luncheon served by ladies and girls of the|

| Pekin district.

here to nominate a President?” “So what?” said Mrs. Walters. “Well, it's important. What's

|everyone was barred from appearling on streets or in public places {between 8 p. m. and 6 a. m.

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War: Our Enemies and Our Asso[ciates,” published by "the Indiana Historical society. Survivors are his wife, Mrs. Juliet Brown Coleman; two daughters, Mrs. Edgar P. Richardson, Detroit, Mich, and Mrs. Edwin C. Bray, Washington, D. C., and two brothers, Logan Coleman, * Springfield, Ill, and Louis Coleman, California.

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