Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 11 August 1944 — Page 2
AGE 2 ~
KILGORE PLAN
| Cpl. Howard L, Clark, son of Mr.’ and Mrs. Louis W. Clark, former Indianapolis residents who plan to #rove back -here Monday-
Fears Communism If U. S.
ntrols -~|"tiom Pt. Wayne, was killed in the Controls ‘Unemployment [fom . Wayne, was Killed in the Compensation. | Sioux City, Ia.
Cpl. Clark, a radio gunner on & |B-17 which was making its final meres er combat training flight when the By DANIEL M. KIDNEY crash occurred, was 19. He was Times Staff Writer {home on a furlough June 9 and WASHINGTON, Aug.11.—Neither telephoned his mother the night Senators Raymond E. Willis (R. pefore he was killed. Ind) nor Samuel D. Jackson (D. The young airman Was born in Ind) will support the Kilgore petersburg and attended school in Murray bill to federalize unemploy- | Petersburg and Indianapolis and ment compensation and give war graduated from the Medora high workers $35 a week for two years, school. He formerly was employed they said today. . -— } |by the Kroger Grocery & Baking Both likely will vote to substi- | Co. ...tute the George bill, leaving un-| Cpl. Clark entered the services " employment compensation in the April 23, 1943, and before going to hands of the states with increased Sioux City was trained at Seyfederal aid. {mour Johnson field, N. C.; Sioux Senator Willis “is aroused over | Falls, S. D.; Yuma, Ariz, and Linthe drive to put the Kilgore-Mur- coln, Neb. ray bill across. - | The body will arrive in Indian“The pattern which the United | apolis at 2 p. m. today and funeral States is to take in the years ahead services will be conducted at 2 p. m. will be determined by the deci-| tomorrow afternoon in the J. C. sion made on the Kilgore-Murray | Wilson Chapel of the Chimes, 1230 bill for post-war reconversion and! Prospect st. The Rev. John Phelps, unemployment compensation,” he pastor of the Medora Christian declared. { church, of which Cpl. Clark was a Fears 20 Billion Cost { member, will officiate and burial «Jt provides as much as $35 a will be in Round Hill cemetery.
loyment compensation! Besides the parents, Cpl. Clark is for the present and two years after en ed ov a siever , Belen. and 2 nds. - Its cost might con-| rother, Charles, who also expe BS a Tun "over $20000,000,000 a return to Indianapolis to live. i . x = = Yon would place a burden of tax- S. Sgt. Louis M. Hilscher, the sec ation on the country which would ond son of ‘Mr. and Mrs. Simon P. +xipe out millions of jobs through Hilseher, 546 E. 19th st., to die for ~private business and thus make for his country, was killed May 15 when 7 government operation of business in his plane crashed following a flight some form. It would provide a back- {over Emden, Germany. . door to Communism through infla- The othér son, 1st Lt. Clarence tion. It would jeopardize the solv- | Hilscher, who was serving with the ency of government bonds owned by | marine corps, was killed in Decemmillions of pafriotic workers. | ber, 1942, in the Coral sea battle. A “Such a law would also, through third son, Henry, is ~an aviation power of purse; place the federal cadet at El Paso, Tex. government supreme in the field of; Sgt. Hilscher -was a waist gunner unemployment compensation. It on a B-17 and according to inforwould invite idleness and the pro- mation received by his parents, had motion of Communistic propaganda. been on only two or three missions. «If this bill should pass the citi-| The boy's father, who served wens of our country may kiss good- overseas as a master sergeant in by to the American way of life. { world war I, was in the army 30 “The George bill, while not wholly| years, retiring 10 years ago. The satisfactory, expands our accepted | grandfather, Herman R. Hilscher, system of unemployment compensa- served in the civil war. tion to more than 3,000,000 workers.| Sgt. Hilscher was 22, a graduate It safeguards state control and is|of Technical high school and had not destructive of policies here-to- | been overseas two months. His par{ore established. | ents received his purple heart and “ 9 | four citations. Sweat and Tears He is also survigsd by a sister,
on Te Ais. Jaw Mrs. Dorothea Smith, Indianapolis.
security and solvency of America ’ and that is through sweat, tears and | sacrifice. {serving with a field artillery unit “Give them real jobs and they will [in France, was killed June 9, the respond to this challenge.” {day after his 22d birthday. Senator Willis recalled -that his! Pvt. Wilson is the son of Thoma late Democratic colleague, Senator| Wilson, Shelby- . hetr3 Frederick VanNuys, joined in fight ville, but formerly Sa. against a plan to give Federal made Lis hom: Security Administrator Paul V. with his aunt, L000 to dole out to, Mrs. James Hartauto workers ii Detroit during the ley, 1114 Blaine period ‘when the changed over to War
were being ave. Ho entered . + Ylihe army in Oc~ That, too, he ssid, would have tober, 1039, was been the entering“wedge for federal- | transferred to the zation and on that grounds it was, Canadian army = defeated. {in April, 1941, was Governor Henry F. Schricker of sent to England Indiana came here to testify against | the following Noloss of state control.
(Another Story, Page 11)
Pvt. Wilson
{ vember, and was transferred back With Senator Jackson running to the U. S. army in March, 1943.
for governor, he is expected to take He entered France on D-day.
the same stand. The young artilleryman attended
“They didn’t federalize or get the pranklin township high school in $300,000,000 and nothing happened New Bethel and Shelbyville high
in Detroit or anywhere else,” Sen-| school. ator Willis pointed out.
worked out well.” | Shelbyville.
2 2
WILLIS LASHES Hoosier Heroes: Bomber Crash in loa Kills Cl. H Sqt. Hilscher, Pvts. Wilson, Meyer Die in Combat; 2
&
Second Lt. Roy F. Huls . . ing over Hungary.
Pre Kenneth Meyer . . . killed in . Normandy,
miss-
Pfc. Thomas T. Wilson, who was|
1
o J Besides his father and his aunt, Normal unemployment conipen- | he is survived by a half-sister, Bevsation channels in the state took erly Wilspn, and two half-brothers, charge of the whole business and it| Frederick and Gerald Wilson, all of
James Kelly IHanrice Donald Sanders Fred Limp Wounded Wounded Wounded Wounded
of Mr. and Mrs. John Tabor, Ist ave, W,, Mars Hill, ® 2 8 : . . Cpl. George A. Ritzel, son of Mrs. Othilda Ritzel, Evansville, was one of 10 men killed Wednesday when a Liberator crashed southeast ‘of Kiowa, Colo. while on a routine combat training flight. He was a radio operator. . } 2 = = Gunnery Sgt. Michael Spear, son nical high school graduate and was |°f Johh Spear, Hammond, has died
employed in civil service work when 0f wounds received in action. oe he enlisted in the marines Oct. 20, -, ® & 1942. He had been overseas seven| The following Hoosiers are missmonths and saw action in the inva- ing in action:
sion of the Marshall islands. ASIATIC AREA | Second Lt. Morrison R. Miller, son of ® = = | Mrs. Helen L. Miller, Ft. Wayne.
Pvt. Donald A. Sanders, son of| CENTRAL PACIFIC Mrs, Nora Sanders, 4305 E. 16th st., was wounded in action in France July 25 with the infantry. He entered the service in February, 1943, and went overseas in May, 1944. The 21-year-old infantryman is the brother of Mrs. Elea~ nor Miller and Mrs. Ralph Landis, both of Indianapolis. 2 tJ 2 Pvt. James P. Kelly, husband of Mrs. Mabel Kelly, 1627 E. Gimber st., and son of Mrs. Bridget Kelly, 2727 Manker st.,. was wounded in
{France but has returned to duty. | :
dianapolis, lives with her parents, Mr. and Mrs, William Carel, Bellefontaine, O. :
” 2 2 Pfc. Maurice Hindman, who was wounded in action on Saipan, is recovering satisfactorily at Oak Knoll hospital, Oakland, .Cal., according, to word received by-his parents, Mr. and Mrs. A E. Hindman, 516 N. Rural st. The 21-year-old soldier is a Tech-|
Ralplf W. Boltin, Liberty Center. EUROPEAN ‘AREA
Pfc. Thomas M. Baille, son of George S. Baille, Ft. Wayne; Pvt. John Blackaby, son of Mrs. Anna S. Pluthmer, Charlestown; Cpl. Paul W. Buell, husband of Mrs. Fern M. Buell, Clay City; Sgt. Phillip W. Cary, son of Harold G. Cary, Goshen; 2d Lt. Eugene J. Chudzynski, son of Mrs, Nicholas Chudzynski, La Porte; Pvt. Emery C. Denison, son of Ingle Denison, Boston; T. 5th Gr. Hinson'E. Dew, husband of Mrs. Lucille J. Dew, La Porte; 2d Lt. Robert C. Fay, husband of Mrs.
E. Gaffney, son of Mrs. Martha ney, Hommond; T. 4th Gr. Clarence J. Gerber, Famand of Mrs. Lillian Gerber, awaka.
Dwight R. Hartman, West Lafayette; Pvt.
Michael R. Koches, 2 8 =
of Mrs. Leah Ludy, Portland; Sgt
| Pfc. Fred W, Limp, husband of Mrs. Edith Limp, 216 E. 23d st., was wounded slightly during action in ‘the Southwest Pacific and is now
Clanahan Jr., husband of Mrs. M. McClanahan, Milan; 8. Sgt. Charles H. McKeighen, son of Henry K. McKeighlen,
'in a hospital there. | » = ” Pfc. Frankie West, 1618 Kelly st., | has been cited for courage displayed
band of Mrs. Patricia McNeil, South Bend; 8. Sgt. Prank R. McPherson, husband of Mrs. Ruby P. McPherson, Williamsport; 8gt. John Piotrowicz, husband of Mrs.
jin standing by his post during an|P. Puterbaugh, Richmond; = Valle i bit . b, a x ores M. {enemy bombing attack on a town Cu ay ee. Bail Bb. uda, son
in southern England. He is a memiber of a chemical warfare unit and
of John J. Cabuda, South Bend. Second Lt. Robert C. Shafer, son of Ra {B. Shafer,
South Bend; Pvt. George
| was on a special mission with a U. S, Walden, son of Mrs. Edna Walden, East T. Sth Gr. Carney L. Waldron, {husband of Mrs, Patricia Waldron, Brim-
army colonel at thé time of thes 5% attack. According to the citation, Pvt. West proved an inspiration to ‘all around him by the cool manner in
field. MEDITERRANEAN AREA
Mrs. Betty J. Baylor, Georgetown; 8. Leslie A. Cahill, husband of Mrs.
t
PHF INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
owa Kills Cpl. H. Clark;
Y : 1
0! Second Lt. William M. Boltin,’ son of A 0
Ruth M. Fay, Michigan City; Sgt. Walter J. Goff-| Paris
8. Sgt. Fred G. Hartman, brother of |e
brother . of John Koches, Gary: Pfc. Milo W. Ludy, Tiuishane
renzo T. Maiden, husband of Mrs. Theo
1. Maiden, Colfax; 8. Sgt. John H. MecVirginia
Muncie; Cpl. Wilder R. McNeil Jr., hus-
Mary Alice Piotrowicz, North Liberty; Pic. Kenneth J. Puterbaugh, son of Mrs. Lida
Second Lt. Edwin W. Baylor, husband of
Lucille
Pvt. John L. Phillips . . . missing in France.
Cahill, Terre Haute; 8. Sgt. Bevins Clark,
husband of Mrs. Im ee W. Clark, Pt. Wayne; . Willlam H. Fankboner, son of Mrs. Helen Foor, South Bend; S. Sgt. Frank J. Puquay, son of Mrs, Paulina ©. Fuquay, Evansville. 8. Sgt. Charles C. Gibson, husband of Mrs. Beatrice P. bson, Evansville; 1st
Sgt. G. Lavedas, Angelo Be Nicola, brother . Mishawaka; 8S. Sgt. Timothy D. O’Brien, friend of Miss Clementine Memering, Vincennes; Pfc. Jacob C. Roush Jr., son of Mrs. Tollis M. Roush, Terre Haute, and t. bert L. Truex, husband of Mrs, Alta L. Truex, Rolling Prairie. SOUTHWEST PACIFIC AREA Second Lt. Louis G. Mossburg, son of Roy L. Mossburg, Warren.
EB 2 =
Sixteen Hoosier soldiers today are listed among the 957 U. 8. soldiers missing in action. They, are: * EUROPEAN AREA
Pirst Lt. Morton R. Aston, nusband of Mrs. Mary E. Aston, Laconia; 2d IS, Lester R. Driggers, son of Lester G. DrigEvansville; Pvt. Ivan W. Harman,
. Kidwell, { Also Pvt. Joseph L. Petry, son of Bessie F. Petry, Anderson; Ist Lt. E. Riedman, son of Joseph J. Connersville; James O. Snyder, son of Mrs. Gertrude L. Snyder, South Bend; Capt. Fern M. Titus, son of Mrs. M Titus, Rockville, and Pvt, lee R. Alpha Wood, Bloomington. AREA
rs. John
son of Mrs. ME Pfc. Harry L. Coy, Syracuse: Mrs. Ma
of Mrs. Chancey h J. Kiekenapp, fekenapp, HamLadig, husband
Coy, son Pvt. Ral aret
T. Bgt. G. Lenburg, Gary, an Talkers, son of Mrs. Ethel Talbe, nilla.
wounded in combat. They are:
trice Givan, Moores Hill; Pfc. Thomas E.
McBride, son of M
Mrs. Jo J.
which he executed his duties during the bombing attack. He entered the army at Ft. Harrison in June, 1942, and received his training at Camp Swift, Tex. He
formerly operated a trucking company here,
STATE WILL RESELL
2 t 4 s
Capt. Robert K. Berry was awarded the distinguished flying cross and {an oak leaf cluster during a recent review of troops at La Junta army
jair field, Colo. where he is an instructor, vet
imanded a refund, Ross Teckemeyer,
ITS MOTORGYGLES
‘ Indiana again will offer to the highest bidders 52 used motorcycles which a month agb were sold for $24,925, but which reverted to the state when the new owner de-
deputy state
| 2 VANGUARD OF | Pvt. Kenneth Meyer, 18-year-old | ry, award STATE x of Mr. and Mrs. George Meyer, | Berrys achievements Les Son auditor, said today that the state in the China:Burma-India theater WOuld readvertis¢ for separate bids February, 1943, to January, °° : . | Tom O’Brien of Indianapolis, a - used automobile dealer, who purhere today to lay groundwork for, October, 1943, and went overseas in| Indians. un torer oad attended gl 1 ah avy Survivors, besides the parents, are {ment in the air corps. He is the icles over to the state sa} Jias ro y, 421 ceived a refund representing r. and {total expenditure. ’ The situation resulted from an Pr office of price administration rul- ¢. Myles Upton, husband of ing that, while the state was not ‘and Gerald, Indianapolis, and Fran- | MIS. Mollie Upton, 1525 E. Mich- required to follow an OPA ceiling has been presented - the regulation on the sale of the cycles, x- controls were enforceable against
1423 Brunswick ave., was killed in action July 17 while serving with | the infantry in Normandy. |
LEGIONNAIRES HERE
: I1 The first echelon of state -Amer-i - He is -ae graduate of Southport |
jcan Legionnaires were assembling Digh school, entered the service in
- their state convention that opens &PTil 1944. formally at 9 a. m. Sunday. . Preliminaries will include an elec [OU Sisters, Mrs. Edith Hufnagle, | tion of officers by the 40 & 8 group Mrs, Esther Dudgeon and Mrs. Lil- | tomorrow afternoon followed by a lian Kinnick, all of Indianapolis, dance by the same unit at 9 p. m. and Mrs. Helen Shasserre, Cuba, at the Claypool hotel. : Mo., and three brothers, Lawrence
A 2 p. m. parade Sunday with several Legion bands and troops from Ft. Harrison, Camp Atterbury and! #o® 2 Stout ‘fleld will pass through the downtown section. The race for state commander will | July 14, according to word received | be a two-man affair at the closing by his wife, Mrs. Irene Phillips, 1750 | session Monday afternoon when the S. Meridian st. delegates will choose between Wil-
missing in action in France since]
Terre Haute schoolteacher, (Indianapolis) district delegation in a meeting last night,
BUTLER U. READY FOR SHORT SESSION Liberator, has been missing over Hungary since July 2. He has been | Registration for the Butler unij- I! the service since Jan. 6, 1943, and versity post-summer session wil] pe 1184S been overseas two months, | Monday, with classes meeting for 11e€ husband of Mrs. Betty Kross- | the first time the same morning 20d Huls, 3113 Ruckle st. and the] The session will run for three wecks 0 of Mr. and Mrs.. Roy E. Huls, with daily, one-hour meetings. 102 Ruckle st. Lt. Huls attended Standard courses in the colleges Shortridge high school and was em- | of liberal arts and sciences will be P.0Yed by the Allison division of) offered. Classes will include trees Ccieral Motors prior to his induc- | ferns, heredity, agrostology, botany |. He Won his wings at Frederresearch, educational psychology ick, Okla. . . evolution of educational theories |, 0 Jeutenant is a native of Inthe high school curriculum, history |O 2"@Polis and is 23, of education, American government | BoE and citizenship, recent American Pfc. Harry E. Smith, husband of history, speech correction, French Mrs. Annice Smith, 1051 W. 31st and Spanish, (St. and'son of Mrs. Florence Smith, A maximum of three hours’ credit | 18 Annette St, was wounded the may be earned in the post-summer C00 time in school. ~The regular fall semester and is now in a hospital in England. at the university will open Sept. 11 He has been awarded the purple
and 12. Heart, : A former employee of the .Prest-
O-Lite Battery Co., Inc. Pvt. Smith ADMITS DRUNK DRIVING is 23 and entered the army Sept. HOLLYWOOD, Aug. 11 (U. P.. 19 1943, going overseas in April, —Renee Whitney, 32, former Mack 1944. 5 Sennet bathing Iain was | :
a n = |
" fd » named “the ideal’ artift’'s model”! § Sel. Delmar G. Hiatt i 8. . . , son of in 1931, has pleaded ty to a Mrs. Louis Hiatt, R. R. 15, Box drunk driving charge following her 522, was wounded July 7 in France arrest for driving on the wrong side and is in a hospital in England,
from 944,
The captain is a graduate of
{husband of Mrs. Barbara Berr E. 33d st, and the son of M Mrs. Darrell A. Berry,
cis, an air cadet at Brooks field, Tex. | 18an st.
s » sn
infantryman combat badge for e
Pvt. John L. Phillips has been | SPIArY conduct on Bougainville. | dealers.
po has been overseas since Aug.| Thus, O'Brien contended he could | 3 .
LJ 2 ”
820 E. 51st st, |
each cycle, returnable Sept. 6.
not legally sell the machines for
sufficient sums to break even on th
T. Sgt. Victor N. Taber has heer, deal.
1943.
5 Stinson Reliants and 1 Wacn,
Hg
ist-
A former employee of the R. C. A. awarded, posthumously, a seconq/ The state contended that the OPA liam (Billy) Brown, Bloomington Manufacturing Co, he entered the bronze oak leaf cluster to the aj had informed attaches of the state businessman and Wayne L. Lowe, service in October, 1943, and re-|Medal for meritorious achievement auditor's office that there were no Mr. ceived his training at Ft. McClellan, | While participating in an aeria] ceiling regulations on used ‘motorBrown was indorsed by the 11th Ala. He went overseas in April. + [flight over Rabaul, Pvt. Phillips is the son of Mrs. NOV. 2, Eva Bauner, 3834 E. Washington st. |8unner on a B-25. i The sergeant was killed duri Second Lt. Roy F. Huls, a pilot of b bomber crash while he was on so his way Dome on a surprise Chr as furlough. His wi idee oi 1866 Bap His wife resides at
New Britain, cycles. He was a radio-
CARD PARTY SLATED
Cabin Aeroplanes—4 Pessenger capacity,
FLIGHTS ARRANGED ON SHORT NOTICE
EXPERIENCED SEASONED PILOTS :
Daily non-scheduled flights now
Memphis, with eight intermedifte stops. PHONE US FOR RATES AND RESERVATIONS
operating between Detroit, Indfanapolis,
ROSCOE TURNER
2
PHONE—BE-5008
AERONAUTICAL CORP.
Wier Cook Municipal Airport — Indianapolis
A public card party will be sponred by the Burns-West-Striebeck post 2999, Veterans of Foreign Wars i } at 8:30 p. m. tomorrow at the post Ve. and he is the son hall, E. Washington and Denny sts.
a ——
AIR CHARTER SERVICE
TO ALL POINTS IN U.S.A.
*
e
France, July 14, cm
of the road while clad only in bath-| - Entering service June 15 1943 h - Ing suit, slippers and a light coat arrived overseas in-April. ‘His ite and accompanied only by her dog. Mrs. Margie Hiatt, formerly of In-
|
~~ ROSCOE . Wier Cook Munici
Private Pilots’ Ground School
-SPECIAL EVENING CLASSES .
In subjects of Civil Air Regulation, Navigation, Meteorology and Engife and Alrcraft operation. —30 HOURS CLASSROOM INSTRUCTION “AND EXAMINATIONS
STARTING MONDAY, AUG. 14 — 8 P.M. Each Monday, Wednesday, Friday Evening
CALL FOR INFORMATI(
TURNER AERO
~
Long Distance
|task forces of American heavies
. linto its 13th consecutive day to-
B. {southeast of Paris, while the rail : [center and fuel dump at Strasbourg
- |bruecken also were strafed.
oh: ers ‘which hammered the Germans
ry | Western French coast to. their
¢: lors, spring term records at DePauw | 0. university indicated today
Four Indiana marines have been
Cpl. Phillip L. Givan, son of Mrs. Bea-
vens, , an James W. Stiver, son of Irvin Stiver, New
More planes, more ships, more of everything for war mean more
things are moving double-quick.
That's something to remember when
7 YANKS FLIGHTS BLAST EUROPE
(U. P)~"Please may I have a
Such was part of a plea Fedto
id
!
i
g
I
restriction, | sald the order was the cloth would lying in a drawer for feast on. The WPB further evidence of his vest.
sE4d Hi
|with escorting planes—totaling 1000 {atrcraft—carried the air war against the Nazis’ Western Europe defenses ;
i
:
day, hitting the enemy's crumbling needs for a vest probably
£
Judge Wins Plea To
"SPRINGFIELD, TI, Aug. 11
DAY, AUG. 11, 194 WPB for Vest
do not gobeyond the needs of any, © “other individual engaged in offics work,” the judge wrote in reply.’ “Except that in wearing my robe in court, I usually remove my coat and this is not feasible without a vest.” He said he was appealing to “one’s ordinary common sense,” after which a WPB order agreed
sued him a permit.
GLADIOLUS SHOW OPENS WABASH, Ind, Aug. 11 (U,"P.), ~The 1944 Indiana‘ gladiolus show opens here today. The two-day show is sponsored by the Wabash Chamber of Commerce.
transportation lifelines and oil . . stocks. Vitally important oil dumps feeding the tank forces opposing the Americans east ‘of Le Mang were bombed at St. Florentin and Pacy on- the Armancon river 75 miles
and the industrial town of Saar-
Mulhouse and Belfort, two other important Alsatian rail centers, were pounded. ‘ Attack Airdromes Another force attacked enemy airdromes at Villacoublay, Toussus and Le Noble, southwest of Paris, and at Coulommiers, 30 miles east of the French capital Escorted by Mustangs, the bombers reported excellent results aided by good flying weather, The daylight forces went out from Britain at dawn shortly after the return of R. A. F. night bomb-
from the Bay ‘of. Biscay on the home capital of Berlin. g
NON-FRATERNITY MEN TOP, DEPAUW GRADES,
: Times Special | GREENCASTLE, Aug. 11.—Nonfraternity men of the Men's Hall association took top scholastic hon- |
Monday Tuesday thru
Delta Upsilon fraternity was hard’ pushed to take the Greek letler high | grade recognition from the mem-| bers of the Alpha Chi Omega sor-| ority. Overall university grades showed that sorority girls received onetenth of a point higher marks than fraternity men. !
RS ARIE ares A
§
' It takes thousands | of telephone calls | to build a bomber
NN .
and the operator calls. And right now
SUMMER STORE HOURS: 12:15 P.M. to 8:45 P.M,
| Friday _______9:45 A. M. to 5:15 P. M Saturday .____ 9:30 A.M. to 1:00 P.M.
. 8. AYRES & (0.
.
2
—
..and this country is making more bombers than ever before |
you're telephoning Long Distance
says —‘'Please
limit your call to 5 minutes.”
More calls get through quicker when everybody helps that way.
that the judge was right and ise |
PLANE
| pace
Emphasis -t B-29s; 12 “Due fq
(Continued
the end of 19 Will be needed dustries.
The war de] emphasis in re put was being ing the produc Fortresses, suc raided Japan terday, and the giant, long-rang details have no
peller plant doe for the C-46 predicted that propeller order would be mad ‘for props fort emphasis is bei
20,000
will work towar put of 50 plane ule not yet rea monthly as pla Tha Buffalo pl # schedule of tapering off to The army in cutback in P-47 with the prefer portion of th which ean be n
(Continued The gunfire w the latter spot seats of his sé But with all as boyish loc unworried as listed - in the He came to Cmdr. Arch M guard and wa of Senator S
chine guns po! that really 1 enough to do . impossible oth Here is the out in g dispa base in southe Bullets D On D-day, C
