Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 9 September 1944 — Page 7
SE
of the rolling Nebraskq May afternoon, sittin added
| his fist on the table ag
trying to get through Norris and other friends ly cripple the operations. yas engraved on George ut it a good deal thas
his memorial and hig the sun which streameq 1at, in time, this great ley, this great reservoir urdens of the people, foe , will be duplicated in as George Norris had
ing of George Norris tg ground. McCook, Neb, of America, with Main Iroad station, where the 1 its way from Chicago where the stores are,
ame Everywhere
which looks so bare and to the winds and the n, from this land and heir lives here, George + his constant fight in rs for the plain people, same everywhere, and en all over the nation, for the long fight which rge Norris had tenacity dozen years, beginning roposal for government Shoal dams built during through congress with The President not only expanded upon it orris brought the enmity who would exploit them, time-serving politician, nly a short time for four hours speaking appointment of a federal Frank Hague of Jersey im against it. He wag
HINGTON, Sept. 8. f Julius A. Krug, new acts nan of the war produce i, say that he is one of st guys in the world— ll uphill three steps at a gets promoted over the ther people three jobs at nd when he plays poker in to see the last card, vays to come out 8 wine end of the evening. friends qualify this by lieve in his luck, or rely gh anything. Always he nas the stuff to back up s into his hands. selection to head WPB He had just come 1e had made a survey for the power division lunch at Washington's some of his associates France. When a page » left the table to hear bid a hearty welcome, ome right over? vanted to know. esident, you could have 00-pound hulk with an low voltage. Next thing red the top job at the roduction board.
ntrol Officer
{rug had resigned from or of war utilities, vice ng and chairman of the PB, He was 36, he was ings were going in WPB, join the army. He told | Velson not to ask for his an in WPB. But before y, the navy grabbed him
lk as a damage control active duty when WPB » power survey in France, he Germans were doing rent overseas and got to k prepared to report for | from the White House
ue enables him to take and Wilson are both big ven bigger. He eats and h the people who know her trencherman nor sot.
LAMITE 2 DT
¥.
WITH THE AMERICAN FORCES EAST QF VER- never heard of such. things as dynamite nor dreamed | of the airplane and still
DUN, Sept. 7 (Delayed) ~A few days ago, when the returning warrior came into the Argonne, there were still a few signs that the Americans had passed
day, as we passed through Ste. © Menehould, the grim, straggling forest was empty again. save for F. F. 1. boys (French forces of the interior) and the harried German stragglers they were round- + ing up. There were still plenty of American troops on the highway ~the onetime “White Road to Verdun” was black with them. But. most of the G. I's streaking through Dombasle and Parois and * Clermont, some of them the sons of the men who had died there, had no eyes for the wet hills and mysterious woods, and if they knew what region they were traversing, they gave no sign. Once more the Argonne was a closed incident and there was work to be done elsewhere. 1t took a long time to get this far and only a few hours were left of daylight when we turned the corner into the Meuse valley and past the ancient gate - —all that remains of the medieval fortifications of verdun—one of the few structures still standing in’ the city on Nov. 11, 1918. The town was still strewn with characteristic wreckage. There was nothing startling in the piles of rock and broken glass in the streets, nor in the holes where buildings had been, save for the fact that civilians were still thronging the place,
Force of Habit
LOOKING BACK on it, you could hardly remember having considered that there ever might have “been civilians in Verdun. A little inquiry developed that Verdun had gone through this war unscathed _ save for an occasional blasting of its railroad’ yards bv our strategic air force, until a few days ago when ‘remtiants of the Luftwafle came over, apparently with the intention to blow it down. There seems to have been no reason for this operation except that it was the traditional thing to do with Verdun. We went on past Vauban's old fortifications, still undented despite the bomb craters all around them. Undented too, presumably, were the underground workings and you gave thought to Vauban who had
CHARLEY JONES, general superintendent of We haven Block's, is among the latest to be smitten by the tions. . . aviation bug. He took his first flying lesson Thursday control division has at Hoosier airport, and was to take his second today. renters. One woman called on him the other day and First thing you know, hell be building a landing said her landlord, age about 65, wanted to marry the " field on Block's roof, so he can woman's daughter, 21, and threatened to evict the family if his offer of marriage wasn't accepted. Anbeen bitten by the flying bug is ,other woman who lives in a double complained that Police Chief Clifford Beeker, Cliff the folks n hasn't quite made up. his mind .the OPA to make the critters stay whether to learn to fly, but he's say that we blame her, either. One woman called on Fred Seidell, also of the rent division, recently lot of window blinds and other houseon his floor. She thought she
fly to work. . . . Another who has
giving it a good think. . . . Some-
. him to climb aboard the train, ealled him “Colonel Tyndall.” There was some hasty whispering, and the “colonel” was corrected apologetically to “General Tyndall.” . . . Governor Schrick-
committee Friday. - Along about noon, Frank Mec-
squadron at Corpus Christi, Tex,
‘Solomon’ Dugan :
he beats the drum too hard, while others argue he doesn’t beat it hard enough. “I fixed that,” says Martin. “I use two sticks, one hit the drum hard with one and easy with the other.”
Labor Front
WASHINGTON, Sept. 2—The last of the red-hot subject to leadership of John L. Lew
holdouts against orders of the national labor relations
board is booked soon for what many hope but few ize the : retired
expect will be a farewell appearance.
Steel Co. of Weirton, W, Va, named for Emest T. Weir. Yes, it's the same old case—oldest on the NLRB docket, the grandpappy of all the cases in which
act, has gone to bat in behalf of
with an employer. The proceedings in which NLRB lawyers will appear Oct. 9 before the third U. S. circuit court in Philadelphia to charge Weirton Steel with contempt of the court's orders, started July, 1937, when the present board filed its first complaint under the Wagner act. But the case really goes back to 1934, covering al< most as many years as the Roosevelt administrations. In 1034 the complaint (essentially the same one as now) was instigated by the late Gen. Hugh 8. Johnson, then administrator of the national recoyery administration. The NRA prosecutich ended a year or so later in a U. S. district court in Delaware, where the judges accepted the company plea that manufacturing was not interstate commerce.
‘Weirton Still a Holdout
than 500 soldiers.
a day. | :
Front Line Report By Robert J. Casey
5 §
through there for the second time in 27 years. Mon- that leads to Dousmont.
Biggest Superfortress Fleet|
gravel of the winding driveway there was no one around it—not even an ing G. I. or a skulking German sniper, Heinie Never Learns. a THE CRUNCHING wheels of a jeep sounded eerily
fleet yet sent against Japan blasted | steel works at Anshan in Southern Manchuria and a highway and rail junction at Sinsing along the Peip-ing-Hankow railway in China yesterday, it was disclosed today, as "| American airmen gained control of the air over the Southern Philippines and possibly as far as 900 : miles east of the Western Carolines. ‘We sat down on the fitful gun flares, not distance, and at the crumpled remains of fortifications and trench systems and at what we could see of Dead Man's hill—and for the moment we forgot)... time. It was a jeep driver who made the only com-
“Heinie never seenpy fo
ving forward on a lower road snd we went along with it and to head out until
the number of B-29's participating but the Japanese Domei news agency reported 106 bombers were in - fleet.
“Great guns,” he said. learn anything, does he?”
ot, There was a column mo ing and thet numerous hits were
scored on the Japanese’ industrial center, the war department announced
seemed to be no object in going farther so we came in the last of daylight to this weird hill. An artillery observation outfit occupied most of it—an outfit whose G. 1's not otherwise ‘employed were looking at a We begged sa meal, which we. ate in the open with a lot of officers we couldn't see while we discussed mutual acquaintances, books, cities and the beauties of France and listened to offstage noises of war. We slept under the guns in the rain. . There have been few such nights.
Copyright, 1944, by The Indianapolis Times and The Chicago Dally News, Inc.
(Ernie Pyle is on his way back to the United States)
Inside Indianapolis By Lowell Nussbaum
't heard whether that satisfies both fac- . Marcellus Pohimeyer of the OPA rent all. sorts of complaints from
ext door keep pigeons, and she wanted off her roof. Can't
one committed a terrible military and dumped a blunder during the reception for hold appurtenances Thomas E. Dewey at Union Sta- paid too much rent for a room, and brough tion Friday noon. The someone household stuff in —we didn't hear who it was—saw kept up right. . .’ Mayor Tyndall and, in inviting Lillian Fox of Lemcke building, has a sister
Just a Dream
THE PUBLIC relations and special services office er attended a meeting of the new state aviation go¢ Billings general hospital was completely demoralIt was the result of a bad Carthy asked the governor if he wanted to recess ,qo of wishful thinking, brought about by that the meeting and go to the station to greet Dewey. erroneoils “end of the war” broadcast that originated “No: I don’t want to miss my lunch,” the governor in Brussels, The situation resulted in quite a few replied. “en It (ig) Angelo Angelopolous, who has Jost man-hours of honest endeavor. been home on leave, reports next week at Jackson- ... G I to a nearby corporal, “I think you'd look ville, Fla, for operational training in carrier tyP€ cue in a herringbone tweed with yellow tie and socks ajreraft.. He has been instructing an advanced cadet go 4 stuff” “That's not his type at all” interrupted someone. And then the discussion became involved and elaborate as one after another they confessed their preferences as to color, line and quality of their MARTIN DUGAN, who has charge of tele- peacetime dream-raiment. . . . Everybody felt happy phone company's plant safety (police) department, is and a modern King Solomon. . Martin plays the bass lighted and drum in the Bell Telephone Legion post drum corps. every man Some of the other players have been complaining that lounge robes,
to show that her room wasn't And then we're told that Mrs. the Waf Price board, in room 1003, named Hazel Wolf.
ized Tuesday morning.
“Gee,” remarked
relaxed. Feet went up on desks, cigarets were a nice, drowsy atmosphere prevailed, with lost deep in his dream of sports suits, perhaps even white tie and tails. How rude, then, the awakening—the door’s slam—the distribution of a small mimeographed slip: “Starting in each hand, So.I Sept. 15, regulations call for the exchange of summer _ tans for wool O. Ds.”
By Fred Ww. Perkins
federal laws. The C. I. O, then, under is, soon began to organworkers in steel mills, and when John L. j (because of 8 bad election bet in 1940) Philip This is a venerable case. It involves the Weirton Murray continued with the C. I. O. and the United America. Now the steelworkers have contracts in nearly all steel mils, and claim a membership of more than 800,000. But Weirton is still a holdout, despite vigorous C. I. O. efforts to crack it. Employee affairs at Weirton are still handled by ustod: of the Wagner the Weirton Independent Union, Inc, as successor RLRB, an of a to the Weirton Steel Employees Representative Plan so-called legitimate unions against and the Weirton Steel Employees Security League.
unions charged with playing In «pjop Soyads’ Cited BEFORE THE Philadelphia court the NLRB, actas a policeman in enforcing the court's orders, alleges that the Weirton Steel Co. has continued, in in violation and contempt of those orders, to support and dominate a labor organization and with “continu- - ation of physical violence upon C. I. O. members, and incitation, encouragement and assistance of others in such violence for the purpose of discouraging C. I. O. membership and activity.” appear citations of “riot squads,” allegedly organized and paid by the steel company, to break up C. I. O. meetings and assault C. I. O. organizers and members. pany has not yet filed its formal court reply, but the Weirton Independent Union has jumped into the argument with letters to the West Virginia senators and representatives, asserting: “we boldly and with no apologies charge the NLRB is a tool of the C. 1. O.
“It is hard to understand why a government which |sent through Jutland and North ps will Zealand during the last few days,
1. 0.-|and ‘defense paints strengthened,
In these charges
NOT LONG THEREAFTER the supreme court decided NRA was unconstitutional. But in July of 1835 is fighting an all-out war against Nazis and Ja,
congress enacted the Wagner law which swept away allow that war effort to be hampered by the C.
all the arguments about whether manufacturing is bossed bureaucrats of the NLRB.”
Revealed in Raids on Jap Territory.
By UNITED PRESS i The largest B-29 Superfortress
The war department did not give
Revised reports on yesterday's attack on Anshan revealed that only one B-28 is miss-
4 ’
Know where Sansapor, Dutch New Guinea is? Cherry, former Indianapolis aircraft worker, does. Astride a 37 mm. cannon as an amphibious ’ member supporting MacArthur's forces, Pvt. Cherry is sighting from the strategic spot towards the Philippines, only 600 He lives at 3109 E.
miles away. 10th st.
Rebuffs Ahead, Yanks Warned Despite Genius For Fraternizing.
PARIS, Sept. 9 . P.) ~The genius of American soldiers for fraternizing with everyone they meet is becoming a serious problem for authorities as the armies advance
[toward the hostile populations of}: Germany.
So far the fraternizing with civilians in countries where they have fought has been all to the good. In Germany it will be a different matter.
No Flag-Waving
No one will be waving flags, making the V-sign or begging cigarets and candy—and it is going to be hard for the average, and inherently friendly, G. 1. to understand. Moreover, experienced students of Germany are convinced - that the Nazi party long ago completed plans to go underground with the
Smoke Veils Area
A 20ih airforce communique also
‘said that the crews of ths last
ASME 5 ON BELFORT GAP
their objectives were obscured “by clouds of smoke from fires started
area edrlier. Complete preliminary. reports showed that U. S. gunners shot seven enemy fighter planes, probably destroyed 10 others and damaged 11. : Tokyo radio said today in a broadcast recorded by United Press at San Francisco that in addition
campaign through the Central and Southwest Pacific, said the enemy failed to offer any aerial opposition in the latest raids on the southern Philippines or Yap and Ulithi in the western Carolines. Tokyo reported that the U. S.
at the 15-mile-long island. The flattops had sent their planes against Yap and Ulithi, to the north, on three consecutive days prior to the shelling. The Japanese radio still maintained the fiction that organized fighting was continuing on Tinian
In other Pacific raids, heavy bombers again hit Talaud island, 100 miles south of Mindanao, and
Philippines and the western tip of
while 50 other bombers attacked
ALLIES TAKE HILL NORTH OF FLORENGE
ROME, Sept. 9 (U, P).—Allied troops captured two dominating heights north of Florence and advanced to within 2000 yards of the important communications center of Pistoia today, forcing the Germans in the western sector to begin a withdrawal behind the Gothic line, Violent rains and thunderstorms restricted operations along the entire eastern sector, however, and the British 8th army made only small local gains in the Conca river area near the Adriatic sea. The Americans now control the Serchio river line from the coast to a point near Saltocchio, including the crossing immediately north of Lucca, where they took Monte San Quirico, a mile and a half north of Lucca, yesterday and continued to advance northward.
HINT GERMANS FEAR DENMARK INVASION
STOCKHOLM, Sept. 9 (U. P).— The Danish press service said today that the Germans expect an invasion’ of Denmark soon and one rumor reaching here was that an allied invasion fleet already was en route from Iceland to the Danish
peninsula. Heavy reinforcements have been
particularly at Skagen, at the northern tip of the peninsula. The German garrison at Skagen
} ° was said to have beén increased by By Ruth Millett 2000 men and three rows of confar as we're concerned that makes them all members |from Grenen to Frederikshavn. The of the same lodge.” The boys who have spent Sundays on. that|at low tide. _ farm have come from every state in the union. Some
are farm boys, who insist on helping with the chores SOUVENIR WAR SHELL
because it seems like home, and some are boys from EXPLODE Eastern cities who admit they have never been on a _ That couple aren't known in their town as being] NEW YORK, Sept. 9 (U. P.).— active in war work. But they have probably done more than anyone in their community to show the boys training to go overseas just how much they are
the country club set in the same town work. Yet the country club
iWe, The Women
THEIR FARM is near an army camp and in the two years of its existence they have entertained more
Maybe “entertained” isn't quite the word. For this farm couple, with a large faniily of children of i their own invites the boys to make themselves part of the family for
1 e gardless of the official end of reALLIES CLOSING z= ths ‘of sniping and even months of sniping and ‘sabo-
” . to by Superfortresses which hit the French and Americans Face teiowship. Increasing Resistance In S. France,
By ELEANOR PACKARD United Press Staff Correspondent
ROME, Sept. 9.—French troops
to three B-29's which “definitely of the 7th army, advancing 31 had been shot down” in Friday's|miles. in one day, swept up the raid on Anshan, six others had been |Franco-Swiss - frontier to within hit and heavily damaged. tess than 25 miles of Belfort today No Opposition Offered while American Gen. Douglas. MacArthur and through Nazi opposition at BesanAdm, Chester Nimitz, whose forces {con and resumed their advance tohave joined in the steady aerial{ward that gateway to Germany. (An Algiers broadcast, reported|%caPonby London newspapers, said allied troops were within nine miles of Belfort while the Vichy radio added that the rumble of guns could be heard in Switzerland. .(A Berlin military spokesman task group roaming the Carolinesiglss reported that American forces again launched its air fleets against hag “considerably” stepped up the Yap, while the big surface warships|intensity of their attacks “in the stood offshore and hurled explosives area of Belfort gap.”)
Capture Le Creusot
Another force of French troops, moving up the Saone valley, bat-
tered through stubborn German rear guard defenses and drove north and west from Chalon.
broke
and Guam. site of the Schneider Iron and Engineering works, the largest munitions plant in France. ad with a population of 27,600, is 21 issio Halmahera, midway between the| oo. ao wo’ of Chalon. commission.
It also was disclosed that light
Le Creusot,
aritime Alps
canon-Belfort road to the vicinity] of Roulans-le-Grand, where they were 36 miles southwest of Belfort. announced that eight German generals had been killed or captured in southern France. The latest were Maj. Gen. Schmidt, killed by American machinegun fire on Wednesday, and Brig. Gen. Paul von Felbert, captured by the French.
SOCONY LTD. CHIEF DIES
MONTREAL, Sept. 9 (U. P).— John Albert Brown, president of Socony-Vacuum Co. Ltd., died early today from complications following a recent operation.
Heiress to Bishop's $400,000 Held in $27,750 Gem Thefts|x ue. miso comeponien i
RIVERHEAD, N. Y., Sept. 9 (U. P.) —Mrs. Job Taylor, daughter of
scendant of two presidents, was in jail today charged with stealing | proximately $400,000. $27,750 in jewels while attending parties given by her socially promi-
Police said -she admitted the thefts, which included a $25,000 ruby clip belonging to Mrs. E. C. Stollenwerck of New York,
an attractive dark-haired socialite and mother of | stance Travis of New York. two children, told police the jewels to a Philadelphia jeweler
e sold)
Police said she had inherited a small fortune from her : parents,|and of Benjamin Harrison Sr. Bishop and Mrs. Frederick Lincoln Flinchbaugh of Wilkes-Barre, Pa., the money was left in trust. Mrs. Taylor said she stole thelWilkes-Barre and Philadelphia.
Mam. . . You know the grocery ; mon who fold us about that
final shots of the war and that re-
tage. The army’s newspaper Stars and Stripes already has begun a campaign to remind G. I's that the Germans are enemies who may try win them over by a pretense of
Picture Published
Yesterday's edition carried a picture of a smiling German prisoner
American soldier.
tinu
THERELL BE NO KISSES IN REICH
trying to shake hands with an
“This picture should have a poison label on it or a large red
Ranger. sign,” Stars and Stripes oo appointment of Robert H.
“This smiling, handshaking, ciga-ret-mooching, baby-faced Kraut is as dangerous in his way as the hard-pan, sneering, ‘ death-dealing S. 8S. man or panzer trooper. An hour ago mavie HE Was planting A. Hollopeter, commission chairman a mine or squeezing a trigger. ea » . : g vi : is the same guy with a different affairs, Harry C. Hopkins, leaving
The objection stated that the
Cited 5 Times |
OF CHU
Special | Cabinet - Group Economics Summoned
By Roosevelt.
WASHINGTON, Sept. § (U. PJ. _ | —President Roosevelt today called & meeting of a special cabinet committee on world economic problems, preparatory to his conference with The fifth decoration, the dis- |British Prime Minister Winston Wssuished Bras Dupmdheg Churchill at which destruction Murray (right), Indianapolis tail |Iternational cartels in enemy couns turret and left waist gunner, for es sxpecied lo be discussed: ; meritorious achievement. in mis- Secretary of State Cordell Hull, Sec-
sions over Europe. The award retary of War Henry L. Stimson was presented by Brig. Gen. Leon and Secretary of the Treasury
. Johnson. . W. Johnson. Sgt. Murray, whose |p... yroroenthau, Jr. It will be home is at 128 N. East st, also ¥ their third meeting with the Presihas been awarded the air medal : ; with three Yeat clnsters. dent since they were appointed early oak this summer and the second recents
ly. Today's session followed the Presi- . dent's announcement yesterday of : the United States policy for eradication of cartels in enemy countries LE ADERS N AMED and rigid control of cartel practices " everywhere in the world.
-—8ign-of Economic Study
Governor's Commission to The meeting and other recent: events provided further indication
Develop Airways IS [that Mr. Roosevelt and Churchil * Given Impetus.
The first steps toward the de-| discussing the economic problems ‘| velopment of Indiana as a center{which face both the United States Tor, Anesioas ways Wate He and Great Britain now that the war vesterday as ernor Henry F.|, ; Schricker’s commission on aviation BO I A mits held it's initial conference at the . Indi State Cl ber of Com- tee was appointed by the President fnerce offices prior to the Bretton Woods mone- . tary conference and was asked to The commission got under way begin a study of all world economic problems, It was learned that the United States is prepared to begin informal discussions of the international car-
McIntyre as full-time secretary; establishment of headquarters on the third floor of the board of trade building, and formation of nine important subcommittees and appoint-
Laent of sub-Ehairmen by Herschel); NOS: immediately With ihe. .stale
department's ace expert on foreign
Punds from the Indiana Civilian Defense Council, with which Mr. McIntyre has been associated, will Point for Bargaining be used to pay his salary. Plans
soon for London.
; : Mr. Roosevelt is now committed also were made for the next meeting FILE NEW OBJECTIONS Ie Indianaputis Athletie|\” 3.pulicy on cartels ward Whish t. 13 in the Indianapolis AthleUc ;; ;"pelioveq the British at most
club. 3 2 could be only luke warm. Thus IN FARE HEARINGS Subcommittees and their chair- the Roosevelt policy could be a
men were named as follows: na- E ining point. with Churchill. on
Indianapolis Railways, Inc. has tional affairs, Jerry D. Beeler, the whole subject of post-war infiled new objections with the ‘public service commission, declaring
that further hearings on its fare jce Roger C. Fleming, Indianapolis; reduction case should be discon-|charter service, Clyde S. Shockley, ed. | ay
Evansville; airports and municipal ternational trade, according 10 problems, Mayor W. Vincent Youkey, Sms & Crown Point; commercial air serv- well informed sources. ’ The United States could be expected to seek at least partial British support for the American anti-
Muncie; private aviation, Edward F. cartel policy in return for assistance
Rodefeld, Richmond; civil air patrol,
New Guinea. American forces had started ¢ an as-| «would deny the company iis con A Tokyo Jrowices. Jecuitied BY sault on Briancon, near St. Genevre FCC, sai allied planes attacked | nass into Italy, which they were Menado on Celebes island Thursday | forced to abandon 10 days ago to superior forces, possibly Kua bay on Halmahera. withdrawn from northern Italy.
8 Generals Eliminated
A heavy battle was reported in progress at Briancon, which would! who is now their chairman.” give the allied forces a foothold for a drive through the M
of law.”
{ i
attacked her from an alley.
=
newly appointed chairman, Hugh|. i. jegislation, Mr. Hollopeter; W. Abbett, is disquilified to hear|industrial aviation, Fred M. Gillies, One unit captured Le Creusot, the|the case on the grounds that he East Chicago, and public relations, lowering of restrictive tariff -baras a principal investigator and Kenneth B. Elliott, South Bend. riers and the elimination of cartel practices that not only bar a free
capacity as chief engineer ior the : flow of goods, but are used by aggressors to help prepare for war, 3
Railways’ attorneys declared that
ne er pe mouny ss conc ALOIS TRATION LISTED NAZI FALL TO EASE
stitutional right to the due process
witness for the pullic in his former
Mr. Abbett was recently appoint-iat 2800 S. Pennsylvania st.; Law-| . ed chairman of the commission by|rence school; Oaklandon school; night. : | Governor Schrickes to fill the va-| Franklin school, Franklin road and The Americans were reported to|cancy ereated by the resignation of E. Washington st.; school at 30th have driven 11 miles up the Bes-! George N. Beamer.
jewels and sold them because the moving picture, “Behind the Rising income from her trust fund had|Sun,” will be one of the principal i _| been curtailed and she had herself speakers at the Indiana high school an Episcopalean bishop and a de and her children to support. Her|press convention at Franklin college, attorney estimated the trust at ap-| Oct. 27-28. -
She was held on twp grand|correspondents to witness the corolarceny counts—one for stealing] nation of Emperor Hirohito in 1928. from Mrs. Stollenwerck, the other|Other speakers for the 23d annual for the theft of $1750 in jewels from | convention will be announced later. Mrs. Robert Glaenzer of New York
and Westhampton, N: ¥. Police said| FIELD AMBULANCE
she slo admit] te a or PRESENTATION SET
Mrs. Taylor is a descendant of|bulance purchased by contributions both President William Henry Har-{of the International Order of Job's rison and President Benjamin Har-|Daughters is scheduled at 2 p. m. rison (elected in 1888 from Indiana) | Sept. 17 on the steps of the monu-
a| ment. signer of the Declaration of ‘Inde-| Mrs. Mae pars Jacobs, past pendence. Her father was promi-|supreme nent in church circles in Cincinnati {act as chairman of the presenta-
Lt. Col. Walker W, Winslow, Indian- back on a no 1 basis. The key-
note of the United States policy
Branch omces for the registrs-| CONTROLS ON LABOR
The objection further stated that|tion of voters who have moved out a. “if the two other members of thejof their old precincts, failed to vote A RCAGO: ap ’ 2 Pi commission would undertake tolin 1942 or are new voters, will be : be lifted on the day that Germany hear the case they would be re-|operated today and tomorrow from| _ .. s.rc Charles M. Hay, St quired to pass on the weight to be|10 a.m. to 10 p.m, at the following L , . * given the testimony of the person places:
Louis, executive director of the war manpower commission, said in a
School at 1780 Sloan ave gh] nation-wide radio broadcast last
Hay said . that after Germany lays down her arms; the United States employment service will become a service agency rather than maintain its war-time position as a
and Shadeland ave. and Warren | high school, 10th st. and Post road.
GUNS, JEWELS STOLEN| moNDAY AND TUESDAY |reguiatory -body-—He cautioned, AT HOME OF TEACHER Speedway city hall; Ben Davis|nomeier, 0 Woe fsCo® boas
grade—school; Mars Hill school;
Miss Florence Willett, a teacher|Decatur Central high; city hall at| Producing vital supplies needed to at school 24, reported to police last | Beech Grove; John Strange school defeat Japan. i night that her home at 2919 Indianapolis ave, had been entered last night while she was out. She told police that two loaded revolvers,| Fire house at 2320 N. Olney st.; present time is favorable, Hay said. jewelry valued at $795 and $30 in|school at 3614 E. 36th st.; school at|e cash had been taken. 14101 E. 30th st.; fire house at 2900 BOMBER CRASH KILLS 7 Hazel Frankel, 1513 N. Meridian |E. 10th st.; Brookside Community TONOPAH, Nev, Sept. 9 (U. PO), st. was knocked down on ‘16th st. house; school at 1702 Park ave.: | —Seven men were killed yesterday and her purse containing $19 was|fire house at 38th st. and Central| when a B-24 bomber crashed near stolen earaly today by a boy whoiave.
and Crooked Creek school All but a limited number of items are being produced on schedule WEDNESDAY AND THURSDAY |,n4 the manpower problenr at the
the army air base while attempting an emergency landing, Col. Stantdn
YOUNG TO ADDRESS |Smith, field commandant, reported
would spend some of the time during their forthcoming meeting
tel question with Great Britain al-
in putting British foreign trade
toward . international trade is the
today. HIGH SCHOOL PRESS
Times Special
HOLD EVERYTHING
13 years and author of the book and
Mr. Young was one of the five
Presentation of the 13th field am-
of the order, will
tion. lined!”
1 wonder if Ellen and the kids
have been lonely. . . The colfage ? | showed him these— is so isolated. . . No one nearby—
TE — on
»
I
i
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