Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 30 August 1944 — Page 15
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
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PAGE 15
Bul. ALLOWANCES Picnic On Tonight 1,300,000 SLAINBritish Hurl Full Attack [STRIKE NEW BLOWS Doughboys Now Battle . TR RE , a. oe i : ; F 4 a - : : 5 oT APR For Schricker, 61 Adqainst Gothic Line i nf : ine in [tal Where Fathers Once F START. SEPT, 10! ...cr. or or IN NAZI PRISON] Against Gothic Line in Italy do gd / here Fathers Once Foug 0~Lags MER 2 last birthday anniversary in the JAMES E. ROPER The 363d infantry regimen Allied bombers, continuing inten- ILLE + Co pn A ; | [statehouse today while state em-| : Gs Press Staff Correspondent |91st division, it was Siment ot the sive raids through the Pacific, were| 57 ROPERy MILES on ey by Bxieh Lud with cc tary lead- . Veterans May File Claims piovees put the final touches on|Evidence Reveals Burning] ROME, Aug. 30 (U. P).—British|the first time today, went into ac. |Tévealed today to have dumped a CHATEAU-THIERRY, Aug. 20 dence after previous successes ary dead : a picnic party to be held in his : Lo (Sb amy oops in the Adriatic|tion on July 4 north of the Cecina|POSk 108d of 188 tons of explosives CHATEAU PY—American| the Marne region. re accused With State Employment |honor tonight in Garfield park. Of Captives Alive in [sector advanced on s broad front|river and after a series of heayy|O" Amboins, former Dutch naval io Dae For the Germans today Chat It the 81st milestone 1 vy ter in the East Indi d to|doughboys came back to Chateau- y sire to get e was estone for the to within 10 miles or less of the|pattles through the mountains was Center . es, and to, Thierry was only a point along i iviei vernor, who completes his 1 - i ; have struck new blows at a doz erry today and fought across while the Security Division. governaf, pees Sis lourth Occupied Poland. Gothic ‘line today and were ex-|among the first troops to enter Li- *bases, |the battlefields where their fath-|line of their retreat from north statement . ? ’ year term in December. The party, pected momentarily to begin their|yorno and Pisa. The regiment is|Other scattered enemy bases. ers dealt disaster in 1918 to a Ger. France. Patton's swift strikin he White The veterans’ readjustment gl-|NOWever, was not in the nature of By ARTHUR INKPIN long-awaited assault upon the heavy under command of Col. W, Fulton| The Amboina raid was carried OU! man army driving toward. Paris, | AFMOr and infantry gave them erald the program under the G. 1.|* “farewell to politics,” for as he United Press ‘Staff Correspondent [concrete and steel fortifications|Magill Jr. of Portland, Ore, Monday by more than 75 Bombers, " Ichance to establish a line and use there may “Bill of Rights” will be administered | ®¢!ébrated his anniversary, Schricker LUBLINg Poland, Aug. 27 (De-|bullt by the Germans to defend —e and fighters. which concentrated on| The advance today was in pleas-|.1o Marne as a breastwork. 5 : in Indiana from the 24 state offices M&PPed plans for a vigorous cam- M hah 1 000 northern Italy, y the major part of Ambon and left|ing contrast to the one 26 years) The Germans were in full fligh ‘the 100 of the Employment Security Di. |PAIEn to Win a seat in the seriate, | 12ved).—More 500,000 men, [on es British destroyer shened| MUNN’S. WIFE HURT; it in flames. The enemy offered no 480 When the Americans paid or toward their homeland. 'A few . plywood vision beginning Sept. 10, it wasan-| The picine honoring Schricker— Women and children were killed in|the Pesaro area, Adriatic anchor of ELLS resistance. every mile with hundreds of lives! pockets were left behind as rear he story: - nounced toda yO the only Democrat elected to a|special gas chambers or cremated|the Gothic line, British and Polish| I OF BEATING| Air patrols again blasted Kace and the valley of the Marne Was guards but they offered little res De Cin eed tou as ila of world State office in 1940—was planned at the German Majdanek concen- troops launched a drive which rap- NEW YORK, Aug 30 village on Halmahera in the series|an inferno of shellfire, About the | sistance, : : g. between war II may file their claims with |DPOth by statehouse Republicans and | tration camp, a Polish and Russian idly took on the proportions of a Mrs, Louise Stanie nn UE): |0f neutralization raids on the en- only thing unchanged was the, The Germans left the allied The prices the state t rity di. | Democrats, committee investigating the camp general offensive and pushed the of wealthy and Y Munn, 29, wife emy base 250 miles south of the weather. It still was raining. |shrines to the last war's dead un ns employment security di- Committee members anticipated|said” today. crack 1st German parachute divi-|ogyst Lt. eh Socially prominent Philippines. Other airmen attacked, Most of Lt. Gen. George 8. Pat- | touched. The “Rock of the Marne” until the separa by Sivesicting Siscarge ola crowd of 2000 for the picnic lunch| Touring the camp, I saw cham-|sion from the last’ ridge in front > sor} a A. Munn Jr, was|the port of Davao on Mindano in{ton’s army which crossed the Marne | statue in Chateau-Thierry, dedis with the Jepasaion | has s the ad. and 4000 for the musical program bers in. the camp, established in|of the fortifications. hospital toglay fon 3 Lenox 201 the southern Philippines. today rode in tanks, armored cars, cated to the 3d American division, ; . ic — to trucks and jeeps. dest Although about half of Indiana's |!8tr. 104) Satanahly > J peisanes of a. nS a how 0CCUDY police sald she received in a beating. 19 TIRES STOLEN | There ok gn yard-by-yard and 1og0, oe MERting of Oth discharges now possess benefit les of prisoners were piled on 8|Foglia ri 8 WI overlooking the| police quoted Mrs. Munn, a form-| The New York Auto Parts & Tire hand-to-hand fighting. Gains were eee 1 er rights under the state unémploy- Bodies stretcher doused with in-|the 8 Tven a oe baraliel er_actress, who has been married Co. 915 N. Capitol ave., reported to | measured in kilometers and miles | HURT BY TROLLEY the come ment compensation program, only I W SPLIT flammable liquid and pushed into| ated for = he ne U-|six times, ‘as saying that she had|police this morning that the plant as armored units almost ran over| Marion H. Phipps, 2216 Broadway, ‘needed in 10 veterans actually claimed jobless y furnace oy — piv miles inland been in a fight. but said she offered Was broken into some time last|each other in the race across received head injuries at 8:40 o'clock spondence, pay last month, Everett I. Gardner, A another part of the camp I| The e C. no details. Munn began divorce night and that 19 new tires were France toward the German border. this morning when he stepped mto any to pay director of the Employment Security ON SCHOOL ISSUE saw gas chambers with fitted metal A I a a Pbredings against his wife last stolen. The company set the loss! Today there was little opposi- [the side of a trackless tralley on . T. at, i i his month division, sald. doors, peepholes. and pipes tnoush <1 win int approximately, $250. tion. In 1918 the Germans, com- |S. Illinois st. om buying Expects Volume to Grow which the investigating committee ling prices, He added that while “only al : said poison gas was introduced in er. : trickle” of claims are anticipated in| Withdrawal Asked of Wash- |the chambers. Some chambers obd down for the early weeks of the allowance : viously were intended for carbon st was. To program, the volume is expected to| ington Petitions Blocking [monoxide and others showed evin contempt grow tremendously at the termina- dence of both carbon monoxide and be to stop tion of the European war. Bond Flotation. prussic acid, . : , orders for As in the state civilian unemploy- . Outside, there were burial pits ment compensation procedure, sol-| A campaign to induce remon- for the bodies of the victims, and ment, with diers registered for allowances will gtrators to withdraw their peti-|Piles of ashes filled with tiny bits le contracts be asked to report once a week to | of bones were scattered throughout vilian uses. the employment security office to tion blocking the proposed $395,000 1 camp. k of some renew work Sing and to Bond eae for Shiarkement ine 45 Left of 5000 sign vouchers for read ustment al- John Strange an ora schoo lowance checks. Washington township was started Records at the camp showed that Veterans may be disqualified for : 1 townshi in November, 1943, mostly Russians, quitting suitable work voluntarily |"® * Mss meeting of township poles and Jéws were confined tn urning out without good cause; refusing to at. |/8XPSyers last night. the camp, but representatives of 22 t, including tend free training which| The township advisory board, {nations were believed killed there. all, Joe might be required by regulations; [Which had sponsored the bond is- During this period, a smany as 70,000 1 man or declining to apply for suitable sue to relieve what it described Prisoners were confined at the camp, | ie 0) manue work to which be might be re- as an emergency condition at the Puilt to hold 50,000. ‘ferred by the public employment schools, issued a statement declar-| In October, 1941, the record Tegreiabie office. ing the remonstrators were *“ill- Showed Jw Russian [and Osh Based on informed if not misinformed.” risoners were held bu y February, e for spi Allowances we en YOY ad on| School officials said that if ad-|1942, only 45 remained alive. at used * length of ditions are not built at the two| ‘A Lublin pharmacist, Tadeus ake a look, : of service, the minimum pe- | Budzin, camp prisoner who worked ut whether, riod being 90 days. If a veteran Schools this year, scores of pupils in the pharmacy, said the Ge g s has served only minimum time he's ill be without educational facil- Y, 5 8 | JEFRERS on of the potentially eligible for 2¢ . ities in the township. often killed the sick prisoners hy g up more Pou e for weeks’ al- | injections of a narcotic, epivar, ance. For each additional month Crooked Creek Patrons which if administered slow] - of service, he receives four Yast) weeks of allowance pay Fifty-two! Most of the remonstrators were lY is beneficial, but if injected in a weeks is the SK. said to be patrons of the Crooked | large dose kills within one minute. The allotment is $20 a week for Creek school for which no enlarge- I watched one doctor kill 13 paS totally unemployed veterans, Those|™ent is planned at the present Lents De - Pe os Fans, { time. ring ne I was e camp Tearen, pared Toute the aif-| “5%, eavisory bows sateen Md 1 diet 40 apie of and $23. {sald the remonstrance against the De drug. Pull appeal rights are included ®Mergency bond issue “came as a Sees Woman Burn in read ustment determinatio: 5 . | very distinct surprise and shock to 2 g. 30.—How Ee usamen hearings and a ‘members of the board.” One po an Tat “ be up hope in tial appeals to the veterans admin.| A Committee composed of heads TP: na or: SN is position istrator's Indiana representative |0f the three Parent-Teacher as- and 4 hn — ah &rTan ding. And Who will have headquarters in the %0ciations was named last night —T en 1 4ee 3 Woman t from the division's administrative office, 141/ 0 contact remonstrators to urge “She had b rdired 18 dd azi combat 8. Meridian st. © Withdrawal of their petition before| _ ® Ba beeh ordered fo 1 age sharp cone the scheduled hearing on the bond >t r® Deing shot,” he said, “a attitude of i Sept. 21. when she refused, her hands and ns and im- SCHOOLS TO OPEN |, Toe ace drs virginia £ Good. (oct ere bound. She was placed -that much v |ing, president of the John Strange| >" * * oF anc show fo she hinks it has IPT. A: Mrs. Heleh R. Brocker, (UPace. I heard one scream and on WITH FULL STAFFS es os oie Bi 22 Bp be i fectiveness ) Ld A ets, Mary Louse In the crematorium he said there joi of Gere Indianapolis public schools will TA (were piles of stretchers scattered | ing. Their open Sept. 5 with a teacher in wor Is around the furnaces. Jagged pieces . ‘Believing every classroom, Virgil H. Stine-! of bones littered the floor—appar- | ise of ch baugh, superintendent of public’ BENEFIEL \ AMED BY Fe on en they stuck out , their milie - . i ent democe schools, said last night at a meet : ing of the school board, ! S Bodies in Pit | The board accepted the resigna- ' CHURCHES Nearby was a pit containing 47) we Yul tions of 24 teachers, granted 19, gh, inde pi i Ain ” RY hi leaves of absences an approved | Organization of the Council of prisoners employed in the crematory is Dob Spinto 29 new teachers Associated South Side Churches | torfum -and killed by the Germans ¢ and two cler i le 1 i before they retreated. L$ Country, Mr. Stinebaugh told board mem- |" Cr bo [250 Right a the Outside of the buildings, I looked bility of ine | Garfield Park Baptist church, with 8s, bers Indiana is not training enough around the camp. It seemed to $ not mean . elementary teachers and aside from John Benefiel elected president. be an ordinary prisoner camp, surRa] Sanger, the war situation, there will be a. The council will ask for released | rounded by doubled barbed wire + non-Nagl definite shortage of elementary time religious education in public | fences, patrolled once by dogs and 5 ba teachers in the future, {schools 34, 35, and 72 to begin in German guards. The only thing ps y Hho To alleviate a storage problem at the third grades of those schools different about it was the big orm’ of sul public school No. 24, the board the spring semester. | chimney rising from the middle of fn authorized renewal of a lease on Tp. fe churches which are the camp. Worerooust at 910 and 912 Indiana charter members of the council are Won authorities have encased ons : the Garfield Park Baptist, Bethany | ie square crematorium chimney : A. B. S008. pusiaase director, Te- | Lutheran, Pleasant Run Boulevard | With scaffolding. I was told they hose young ported wo Sshouks, hang | Evangelical and Reformed, Olive are placing a cross on it in memory not mad in appro ma y 34s; od *d DN pranch Christian and Garfield | Of those who perished. nsibility of dent to the public schools. Christian. GES as our own Other officers include the Rev. T to the sell- | C. Paschall, Rev. R. C. Windhorst, 3 APO REPORTED im of which | Mrs. James Yount, and O. C. Petta, TRAILING GOERING some mili. | vice presidents; Rev. E. Janet Rugg, on all fronts OVERCH ARGE TRI ALS secretary. and George Carr, treas-| STOCKHOLM, Aug. 30 (U. P.).— 2 |urer, A usually reliable informant today to be based . . ti ———— confirmed recent reports that , weapons in Taxi drivers “found guilty” by the VANDALS ENTER BUILDING |Reichsmarshal Hermann - Goering safety board of making fraudulent The management of the Com- is under surveillance by the gestapo D-day, then fee collections will be deprived of | nal buildi 1 W. Morris st and his freedom of movement has 1 helped to riving Ii A utiding, + MOIS SL. | peen restricted as an aftermath of their cab driving licenses under rted to police thi i h month—the plans ma today by the safety | "7° police this morning that | the unsuccessful army plot against storms will . pped . vandals broke into the basement of | Adolf Hitler, plies across board and city controller's office. {the building through a rear window{ (A Blue network broadcast from ging infane Safety Board President Will H. last night, damaged an automatic |Stockholm said Goering fell out of ir where we Remy said he had asked for a legal {music box to the extent of $150 and | favor with = Hitler because of his ch ports as , Opinion on the board's authority to emptied the contents of three fire attempt to “hush up” the anti- » ight to sup. “try” taxi offenders and order re- {extinguishers over a newly finished | Nazi plot and the fuehrer himself baby oi Vocation of their licenses by the |fioor. ordered his arrest.) ivisions controller, se destroyed Renewed efforts to crack-down on } oy . : eab-charge irregularities followed Up Front With Mauldin board consideration yesterday of : : 2 two reports on taxi overcharges. One from A. E. Sapers, a soldier, k has forsel i asserted that he and two friends were charged $6 for a trip from. oy - rs defeated Pt. Harrison to Victory field, Ane That's what the B.G.* Nkes as v-3 other complainant, Elmer E. Scott, hi te said he had been 8 dsked. to pay 8 about the fur-trimmed tuxedo, the coat that looks right over her suits Nagl sks sylvania sts. to his home at 20th and : | ET a Alabama sts. ; (slips on comfortably, too, because of this season's ampler armholes) nore, if this the chance CHECK ON CITY FIRE just as right over a cocktail dress. 8 death ay EQUIPMENT ASKED : h impressed Safety Board Member Smiley zi “ameiiog” “Chambers today requested ‘a com: YOU CHOOSE THE BEST WHEN YOU CHOOSE YOUR COAT AT BLOCK'S ome prehensive survey. of fire depart- ' , ment equipment, personnel and ; . buildings by the National Board of Fire Underwriters, In a letter sent Mink-blended muskrat makes the tuxedo front with peaked revers, cleverly narrowed collar at the back on an to E. M. Sellers of the Indiana . . : . Inspection bureau, Mr. Chambers all-wool coat warmly interlined. .Black, green, blue, brown or gold, sizes 10 to 18....Tax included, 99,95 suggested that the fire underwriters, a pow who will undertake the investiga- . erful tion “free of charge,” be asked to s ’ : . . ? ot be given re Ln a on depart]. Alaskan mouton in glowing deep brown makes this cuff tuxedo in the new shorter length, seafoam, brown, mental improvements and to assist| reen or ro: Bows sets isby eer vais “es : included, 99. LoL Wi 2s in carrying them out, : green 5 rod SAPs ata startet fetes sereerereianainiirnasae Jax : ' 99.95 ; HOPE HELD FOR 2 QUADS And there's a lovely all-wool skirt to MAIR. ct br cava r a at ire 10.95 every union ; ! : : Fi ti ingin GAINESVILLE, Ga., Aug. 30 (U. 2 : os = co-operative P.).—Charles E. Lee, soldier-father = ; Cutie ” ae ; x of quadruplet sons born here Sun- | : ae 3 th i *Business Girl i ns re ew 'BLOCK'S WILL BE OPEN atriotic duty doctors today that the two remain- | i : eh is sak: : i the war, the ing babies had responded to treat-| ep \TU nD adie Bio in evidence, ment and probably would survive. : L DAY SA JRDAY a
