Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 27 June 1944 — Page 7

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AMENDED 1ing in good ministration order No. 1 akers to use or rendered nd accepted period May ), 1944, both

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rease your {ten more ention the 3 of gallons als used in n of water, the leaks a plumber,

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emy's last northern Burma strong-

! SCHEDULE CLOTHING SHOW

«ff: sponsorship of the Men's Apparel

hold, Myitkyina, was under relentless attack by converging American, British and Chinese troops thrusting into the city streets from three directions.

A showing of men's and boys’ clothing “for the fall ‘ands winter market will be held at the Claypool hotel July 8-11 under the

Club of Indiana.

Were Stomach Acid Paids Napoleon's Waterloo?

gas ul bloat a should ‘wy Uden Ges o 355 box of i ou v a Baen ots roa First

dose Must CONVINCE oF returrs DOF to ms and get DOUBLE YOUR MONEY BACK

o|E. 13th st, is in & hospital in Eng-

Mrs. H. H. Hombeck, T9709 Westfield rd. A Thunderbolt pilot, Lt. Hornbeck arrived in England in April after receiving his wings Nov. 4, 1643, at Marianna, Fla. He is 22. A graduate of Broad Ripple high school, he attended Purdue and Butler universities before enlisting Aug. 10, 1942. He also was assistant ‘manager of Little America, 63d st. and Keystone ave, owned by his father. He was married to the for-

LT. FRED A. CRAWFORD, pilot of a C-47 transport plane in the India-Burma-China war theater, was reported missing June 11 while searching for a friend who had been missing in flight for several days. Lt. Crawford is the 23-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs, E M. Crawford, 308 Leeds ave. He entered service May 17, 1942, and had been overseas a year, A graduate of Technical high school, he formerly worked at the Allison division of General Motors. He has two sisters living in Sey-

Fortress, Sgt. Potter has been in the service two years, and went overseas a year ago. He has won the distinguished flying cross, the air medal, and several oak leaf clusters. He was employed at the MarmonHarrington Co. before entering service.

* 8 » T. SGT. FRED P. CRAWFORD, husband of Mrs. Lois Crawford, 236

land recovering from wounds received May 11 in action over France.

heart and recently was promoted from stall to technical sergeant. Sgt. Crawford is an aerial gunner and crew engineer on a Mae rauder bomber. He has been in England since December and entered the army in September, 1942.

Jimmie. His parents are Mr Mrs. J. C. Crawford, West Alexandria, O.

a , Mrs. : Henrietta Welle, Indianapolis. Lt. Hanson yn» Killed Honored PFC. JOHN W. RAMSEY died|c, Terry, 767 N. Belle Vieu pl, was June 22 in the Russell islands as & wounded iri the invasion of France result of drowning, according to a

and is now a patient in a hospital in England

Entering service on Jan. 22, 1943, he trained with the infantry at Camp Wheeler, Ga. He has been overseas 16 months and took part in the Sicilian campaign. He attended school in Alabama and formerly worked for the Thomas & Barrick Machine Co. A sister, Miss Geraldine Terry, lives

ment” as a co-pilot on a Flying Fortress in England. He has participated in more than 20 heavy bombing assaults on vital Nazi targets in Germany and the occupied countries. In April his Fort was forced down in { the North Sea. After drifting

BEEKER WINS POINT IN GAMING DEBATE

Indianapolis’ bitter law enforcement feud erupted violently yesterday at a secret conference in which Police Chief Beeker was upheld in his policy battle with Safety Board President Will H. Remy by the two remaining safety board members, Both board vice presidents, Paul Robertson and Democratic Smiley Chambers, were understood to have

Chief Beeker denied that there

anti-vice policy, despite contentions by Mr. Remy that the town is not | “tightly closed,” especially against {pool ticket sales. Rumors persisted that the safety board president has asked informally for Chief Beeker’s dismissal, but was defeated in this request by Mr. Robertson, Mr. Chambers and Mayor Tyndall. The chief explained that gambling establishments now operating are doing so under the protection of injunction suits, prohibiting police raids. He also defended recent personnel shifts, some on grounds that the changes had come about a8 a result of the “normal departmental turnover.”

G. A. R. BANQUET SET HERE. FOR

presided over

Though their experiences of the

favorite topic, the ers of another are keenly interested in the present conflict.

=

had been any liberalization of his!

TONIGHT

Lt Satterfield Capt. Krueger ~~ Sgi. Russell Pvt, Fred Cosand Sgt. J. B. York

Honored Honored

12 hours, he and seven others of the 10-man crew were rescued by 8 R. A. F. Walrus seaplane and landed in England. The overburdened rescue plane had been forced to taxi all night for 70 miles through choppy waters with its survivors. Lt. Satterfield also holds the air medal and three oak leaf clusters.

=" ® "

CAPT. KIRKLAND C. KRUEGER, 1001 College ave., has received an oak leaf cluster to his air medal as a heavy bombardment station in England. A B-17 Flying Fortress squadron flight commander, he was cited for “courage, coolness and skill” displayed in sustained combat operations over Europe. He is the son of Mrs. Mary Krueger and formerly was a bank teller at the Fountain Square State bank. A brother, Capt. Stan Krueger, is stationed at Atlanta, Ga. " » ¥

T. SGT. GEORGE E. RUSSELL, (4608 E. 21st st, has received the air medal for “exceptionally meritorious achievement while participating in bomber combat missions over occupied Europe” from his Liberator station in England. He has taken part in raids on the Nazi targets of Brandenberg, Guther. sloh and Berlin,

8. SGT. JUNIOR D. KING, a radio operator-gunner on a B-24 Liberator based in England, has been awarded the air medal for “meritorious achievement” in bombing assaults on Nazi targets.

Kroger to Honor

Manager Reis

GEORGE REIS, manager

honored at a testimonial dinner given by the executives and of the Indianapolis branch Wednesday at Spencer's. } Mr. Reis will celebrate his Mr. Reis year with the Kroger company,

HEAVY BOMBERS

(Continued From Page One)

the sprawling railway yards, a bottleneck on the main Belgrade-Za-greb line. Simultaneously, a force of R. A. F. Halifax bombers swung out from their British bases to drop their

The bombers, covered all the way

by allied fighter planes, returned without loss.

RANGE OVER AXIS

{return to his law practice in

Wounded Wounded

He is the son of Mrs. Ola King, 847 Thompson rd., and the husband of Mrs. Margaret F. King, 5123 N. Bancroft st. Before entering the service he was a cost accountant for the General Motors Corp.

THE NAVY DEPARTMENT today listed Signalman 3-¢ Gilford Rudolpheus Albertson, son of Mr. and Mrs, Paul Luscomb, La Porte, as dead, and Seaman 2-¢ Farrell Perry Weaver, husband of Mrs. Bernice Olete Weaver, Anderson, and Radarman 3-¢c John Ivan Webber, husband of Mrs. Jessie Webber, Gary, as wounded.

THE WAR DEPARTMENT reported that T. 8gt. Raymond J. Small, Hobart, previously reported missing, has been killed in action. Prisoners of war in the European area are 8. Sgt. Edward A. Myszynski, son of Mrs. Anna Myssynski, East Chicago, and 1st Lt. Ray Sparks Jr, son of Mrs. Ray E Sparks, Merom.

8. SGT. JAMES F. PETRI, son of Mr, and Mrs. John PF. Petri, 4001 E. Washington st, has been awarded a Presidential citation for ‘his participation in the New Guinea campaign. A member of a troop carrier unit of the 5th air force in New Guinea, he was recently promoted to his present rank. He enlisted in the air forces in October, 1942. He formerly worked for the Western Electric Co. here. His wife is Mrs. Maxine B. Petri of Indianapolis.

2 PUBLIC SERVICE APPOINTMENTS SEEN

Appointment of at least two-hew members of the Indiana Public Service Commission may have to be made by Governor Schricker before he completes his term in office next January. George M. Barnard of New Castle, one of the three commission

members, has been nominated by President Roosevelt to the Repub-

pected to leave in August if his nomination is confirmed by the U. 8S. senate. The term of William A. Stuckey, Indianapolis attorney on the commission, will expire July 8 and it has been reported that he will not be reappointed. Governor Schricker has not indicated who is being considered for the vacancies. Although George N. Beamer, commission chairman, is known to have asked to be relieved of his post to

South Bend, the governor's office. today said he had agreed to stay on the Job until the end of the governor's term.

Superfluous H Truths:

Tweesing, Cutting or Shaving will move SUPERFLUOUS HAIR tempeulates the growth, scientific method © PERMANENTLY aad

Cost Is Moderate Consultation Free and Invited

Whittleton

of INDIANAPOLIS, Ine. 28 BIG FOUR BLDG. MA-3968

16 Years in Indianapolis

ON AIRPORT SITE

Attempts to compromise differences between remonstrators against the proposed establishment of a private airport at 73d st. and Spring Mill road snd officials of the Missourl Aeronautics Institute will be made at a conference at the Columbia club tomorrow, Oliver L. Parks, head of the Missouri institute, who is seeking to establish the airport on 133 acres of land in Washington township, said he will confer with representatives of the remonstrators in an effort “to iron out differences.” The remonstrators, residents of Meridian Hills, Crows Nest, Arden and Williams Creek, have protested that the proposed site of the airport is too close to residential areas and would be hazardous to children and would depreciate property values. A public hearing on the aeronau- | tics institute’s petition for a zone variance to erect the airport on the

FREE PARKING

3360

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Prices Rise Higher | Than Skyscrapers

CHICAGO, June 27 (U. P)~ So many prices have blown higher than skyscrapers here that Chicago this week is a scalper’s paradise. ‘A block of convention tickets, covering . all sessions, will bring between $25 and $50. A man who has worked his way well to the front of the reservation line at convention headquarters in the Stevens will give way to some hurried individual—for a price. Delegates are discovering that Chicago’s taxicab system 1s unique. The meters on most cabs never stop and may read as much as $82.00 when some lucky group going the same direction finally succeeds in hailing one. The

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bits.”

AUTHOR'S SISTER KILLED

NEW YORK, June 27 (U. P.).— The British information service re-

DRESSES $3%..

“ 4th” or ust in time for “July the . I an needs comes this wonget ful assortment of Seersucker hig t or ant colors; just what you need for holidays, the garden and vaca tion time. Sizes 12 to 40.

Women's Smart Looking, Cool

SLACK SUITS 98

WASHING TON ST

4th of July Bargains

Women's Smart Seersucker

to $14.98

trim. Fitted with d cket, saddle stitched collar am pockets, pleated slacks. Sizes 13 to 52.

NHR nn:

FREE PARKING

Clearance of |

STRAW ¢ HANDBAGS °

FORMERLY, $169, $2, $2.25 ’

Natural straw color with colorful embroidered

Plus Tax

Plus Tax

designs

For That Bare-Leg Effect!

56:

The well-dressed woman Or miss who desires the bareleg effect will wear

and pretty color these extra sheer 400combinations. needle, no - seam hose, Lovely new sum- selected frreguiars from mer bags you'll be America’s makers, proud to carry. Pretty light summer Greatly reduced shades. Sizes 8% to 101 Prices. Star Store, Street Floor

A Cool

Made of sanforizeq or-outer style,

$7.95 to $12.95

SLACKS

Spend “The 4th "

Men’s Summer

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on

or Your Vacation in

SLACK suit |

Poplin with in. Shirts in plain blue, green and teq), Sizes 29 to 43

Other Men's Slack Suitg

TRE TTT