Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 21 November 1944 — Page 10

I.

‘the Old West! court here in one day.

“DALLAS, Tex. (U, P.).—Shades of Six cases involving saddle theft came up in criminal

David W. Thomas Dies at 60;

Funeral to Be Tomorrow

ja at

} 4 MOTH HOLES | + TEARS

1:30 p

m. arry W. Moore peace chapel, Ev Thomas, who lived at 952 N, | Parker ave, died Sunday in Method- | three daughters, Mrs

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| ist hospital.

He was 60, Born in Cardiff, Wales,

he came | Betty Thomas of

The Rev, W. O. Breedlove, pastor to this county 41 years ago. Mr. (of the Calvary Baptist church, will| Thomas | conduct services for David W, Thom- | Schwitzer-Cummins . Co. for 18 tomorrow in the years and was

had been

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Pilgrim housewives brewed the beer that was served with the first holiday feasts. Wild turkeys, then abundant, also played a leading part. Thus the turkey became a traditional part of our boliday seasom.

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son, Machinist's Mate

Pitzer. MRS. ELLEN STANLEY Services for Mrs, Ellen Stanle

all |\will be at 8:30 a. m,

at 9 a. m. in Holy Cross Catholi church, Burial will be Cross cemetery, Mrs. Stanley, who was 55,

yesterday at her home, ket st.

iin 1905.

lence D.; {John D.; |Ellen Hendricks, [Stanley and Mrs. Rose Ella Aldrich:

two sons,

mer resident of Indianapolis, in an Omaha, Neb., day. He was 69. Born in Indianapolis, he had been |associated with his father, Richard | Robert Reeves, as a stock buyer at [the Union Stockyards until 1903. | He was a buyer for Wilson Brothers, {meat packers, in Omaha. t Mr. Reeves was a graduate of {Shortridge high school and a mem- | ber of St. Paul's Episcopal church. | Surviving are his wife, Mrs. Vivian

died hospital yester-

{Omaha; a sister, Mrs. Ethel R. Mc(Kenna of Chicago, and a brother

Services and burial will Omaha.

be in

RICHARD C. ARNOLD

Services for Richard C. Arnold, 4119 College ave., will be at 3 p. m, today in the Blackwell funeral home with the Rev. Sidney Blair Harry, pastor of the Meridian Heights Presbyterian church, officiating. Burial will be in Crown Holl, Surviving are his wife, Mrs. Isabelle Arnold; a son, Paul Arnold of Indianapolis, and a grandson, Paul Arnold Jr. stationed in Denver, Colo., with the army air forces,

HOWARD C. SCOTT

Services for Howard C. Scott, a retired railway man, were to be at 2 p. m, today in the Moore & Kigk mortuary, 2530 Station st, Mr. Scott, who was 65, died Saturday at his home, 25621 Station.st. He had lived in Brightwood for 50 years and was a member of Veritas Masonic lodge.

‘ORVILLE. JOHNSON MEMORIAL IS SET

Gold star services for Pvt. Orville (8am) Johnson, who was killed in action in France Aug. 7, will be held at 3 p. m. Sunday in the Bethany Lutheran church, Yoke and Shelby sts. | «Survivors are his wife, Thelma, land step-daughter, Dolores Huber, both of 1321 Bradbury st.; his mother, Mrs. Laura Johnson; four broth‘ers and two sisters.

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Survivors include his wife, Linnie; John Tritech,

Pitzer and Seaman 1-c}

2-¢c David Thomas, and a grandson, Philip Ray

Thursday in the Grinsteiner funeral home and

in Holy

died 1521 E. Mar-

| A native of Ireland, she came here She was employed by the / {Hume-Mansur Co. for 23 years and {was a member of Holy Cross church (and ‘the Altar society of Holy Cross. Surviving are her husband, ClarWilliam P. and [4 three daughters, Mrs. Mary Miss Sarah Jane

a sister, Mrs, Delia Collins, all of

(Indianapolis, and three grand|children, RICHARD E. REEVES Richard Edward Reeves, a for-

|Reeves; a son, Richard Jr. both of

George I. Reeves of Indianapolis.

Vitally Human =in Depicting G. I. al = (Continued From Page One)

fare abroad, pictures that crowd his latest book, “Brave Men,” and make it the most vital, human record “ written in this (Henry Holt, $3.) : # #8 MAYBE YOU have read Ernie's, “Here Is Your War,” as well as ¢| the correspondence on which y| “Brave Men” is based and are reddy to take Ernie for granted. Let me say right off that you can't do it; Ernie's work doesn't melt into the literary scene like the books on men whose slant we know, I had read all his correspondence and was completely unprepafed to find this book so fresh and sparkling that it might have been sent over the wires only yesterday.

y

THERE ARE lots of good books about North Africa and Sicily, but most of them are already dated. When you see them you say: “I don’t want any more of that, let's get on to Germany.” But Ernie Pyle can write about these places to his heart’s content because he writes not about ports and cities but about men; because he has hugged the dirt with them under shellfire, eaten cold hash with them in ' pigsties, crawled through the muck with them. Ernie Pyle’s writing holds you and me because it touches universal elements that lie deep in human makeup, and that, you will recall from school days, is one of the definitions of a classic. ® 8 =

IT WAS a British officer who, seeing dead American boys on the battlefield, exclaimed, “brave men” and thus gave Ernie Pyle the title for his book. This recognition of the bond between ourselves and our ally. is quite unpremeditated in Ernie, So too are the generous words he has for the British he meets, and the good nature with which he sizes up the little irritations in London make him more useful than diplomats in frock coats. As for his service to morale, that must be so great that it can’t bg measured. ss =» =

ERNIE, though he knew the brass hats and wrote about them, is primarily the reporter of the common man, the average fellow in the ranks. “You don't write news stories, do you?” an officer in Italy asked and Ernie explained: “I told him no, that I just sort of tried to write what the war was like and didn’t even especially look for hero stories, since there were so many guys who were heroes without there being any stories to it.” . » » = ERNIE has slithered through mud in Italy as a platoon moved into position for attack. He has crouched behind hedgerows in Normandy with the men. He was lain on a stretcher in a fleld hospital surrounded by the wounded. He has helped carry a dead German to an improvised grave in a Norman field. None of these acts was a stunt;

Critic Terms ‘Brave Men’ as

war,

it was the job that came his way and hg accepted it and his feelings were the same as those of the man who cafried a gun

did it partly because the group needed an extra man and partly because I was forcing myself to get used to it, for you can’t hide from death when you're in a war.” “He never “knows it all.” He is always learning and telling stories on himself with a chuckle; He pitches in where he can help and once cooked breakfast for a bunch of airmen, If he is invited to take part in cleaning out a nest of snipers he goes, but he tells you frankly that he gets scared,

» 5 » . YET FEAR of consequences never stops him. At Anzio he went to the harbor to see how supplies are checketl in, “I wanted to see how it felt to sit at anchor aboard a ship full of explosives, within range of enemy artillery. It doesn't feel too good,” he wrote, His narrow escapes are legendary. In Italy he missed shells by a matter of seconds. In the waterfront villa at Anzio he left his, bed to go to the window and 15 seconds later the wall’ fell on the bed. » » 2 HIS MOST terrible experience was the bombing from American planes in Normandy which was responsible for the death of Lieut, Gen. McNair. He tells how the American group stood “tense in muscle and frozen in intellect” as the deadly explosives crept toward them instead of toward the enemy and how “the universe became filled with a gigantic rattling as of huge ripe seeds in a mammoth dry gourd.” Ernie Pyle saw the brass hats, too, and: eccasionally dined at their tables, but they seem to forget their high rank and come down on a level with the privates in Erne's chronicle. Or maybe it's just Ernie's way of seeing them all as human beings, doing the best they can in a terriblé war, » » 5 THERE ARE no resounding titles in Ernie's book—you want to talk about the mas Mark Clark, Omar Bradley, Terry Allen, Ira Eaker, Jimmy Doolittle and the rest — they don’t even get She

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BRAZIL—Mrs. Luvina H. Shaffer, 84. Survivors: Sons, Charles, Oscar and Thomas.

DIAMOND—Robert Gardner, 50. Survivors Wife, Gladys daughter, Eva; brothers, Harry and Bill, FT. WAYNE—Mrs. Herbert Lee, 31. Survivors: Father, William Southard: brother, William B. Southard; sisters, Mrs. Rose Robinson, Mrs. Bernard McDonald, and Mrs. Nellie Runyon. JACKSON TOWNSHIP — Mrs Ella Simonson, 88. Survivors; Daughters, Mrs. Myrtle Fugate and Mrs, Margaret Kirk; sons, Bailey and Fradk. MIDDLETOWN-—Archie 48. Survivors: Wife, Nellie: son Dorsey; father, John H, Ensminger: sister, Mrs. Faye Reed; brothers, Keith and Lawrence. MEROM-—Charles V. Ragon, 79. Survive or. Son, Ed, NEW ALBANY —Ri{ss Ruth Anna Moorman, 16. Survivors: Father, Eimer Moorman; sister, Pertha OAKLAND ory — Mrs. Harrington, 76, Survivors

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PERU~Emil A, Schram, 83. Sons, Emil, Phillip, brother, Henry, SHELBYVILLE-—Willlam W. Ballard, 81. { Survivors: Daughter, Mrs, Gladys Oswald: son, Gordon; brother, A. B, Ballard; sister, Mrs Laura’ Michelsen

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“honor of having their home addresses in the paper, as the privates do. This book contains the story of how Ernie found a British pilot lying wounded in his overturned plane in a Norman field and effected his rescue,” The pilot had been unable to move for eight days. » » » WHEN THE time came for him to leave Italy—for like a conscientious reporter, he .goes from one branch of the service to another, from one theater of war to another—he recalled the misery and sadness and said that few ‘would have fond memories of the Italian campaign. As his plane left he hated to look back. His comment reveals why he is such an able Ixterpreter of the fighting men, “I was not in the sarmy,” he says, “but I felt like a deserter at leaving.”

RADIATOR FIRM HEAD DIES

LOGANSPORT, Ind., Nov, 21 (U. P.).~Funeral rites wil] be held tomorrow for 82-year-old John 8. Burke, co-founder of the Logansport Radiator Co. Burke, who came from Detroit in 1908 and started the firm with J. PF. Digan, died yesterday.’

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