Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 12 December 1944 — Page 7

‘TUESDAY, DEC. 12, 1044 Senate Body

(=Stettinius Asks

For Speedy O.

(Continued From Page One)

writer and-—-as librarian of congress—a proven executive whose experience and abilities ideally qualify him in my opinion. Rockefeller—"As co-ordinator (of inter-American affairs) Mr. Rockefeller has done much to develop better understanding and closer relations among the American re-

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NIEBUHR CALLS RELIGION ‘VALID'

Theologian Terms It ‘Answer to World Problems’ In Butler Talk.

(Continued From Page One) _ forts toward peace. He said the

Dumbarton Oaks parley represents, primarily, an agreement with the

world powers but does not guarantee

“Howevet, it may be as far as this generation can get,” he said, He scorned the greed of the ma» Jor nations for power, saying he saw no readiness on the part of any of them to abridge their soverign powers. The United States is as guilty as the others, Dr. Niebuhr declared. .

“Where Religion Comes In”

“The rapid changes in a modern technical society have obscured the

K. of His Aids

publics. ‘As assistant secretary of|: state he would be, I believe, un-| usually well qualified to contribute| | much to further strengthening of| &

inter-American relationships in the days ahead.” Dunn—“Was oné of Mr. Hulls most valued lieutenants in the state department throughout his 12 years as secretary of state, . . . He was Mr. Hull's political adviser when the Moscow four national declaration was agreed upon. ' At the Dumbarton Oaks conference Mr. Dunn was of great value to me. I | have the highest confidence in his ability.” Holmes—'He woul#l be in charge of administration and management for the department of state and the foregn service, Gen. Holmes is now {deputy chief of staff for civil affairs in the European theater, Gen. Eisenhower and the war department have reluctantly consented to re-| lease him.” | Senator Albert B. Chandler (D.| Ky.), not a member of the commit- | tee, said he would like to question presidential adviser Harry Hopkins in connection with the nominations. “Hopkins,” he said, “probably knows as much as anyone how these appointments were made, He probably would gjve the committee more information than anyone else,”

LEFTISTS INFILTRATE

BRITISH POSITIONS

(Continued Frofa Page One) the past 12 hours against heavy re-

Rear Adm. Arthur S. Carpender, right,’ commandant &f the 9th naval district, confers with Leo T. Dwyer, state vice president of the Navy League of the United States. miral’'s suite at the Indianapolis Athletic club prior to the formation today of a local council of the Navy league,

Rumors Slow Work at Depot

(Continued Fron, Page One)

created a three-week lag in shipment. Meanwhile to move goods with high priority men from other

departments had to be borrowed |

to get the shipment out on a plane in four hours. Hn » ” DAILY mote than 600,000 pounds of engine parts for planes on the fighting fronts move in and

Talking Over New Navy League

HE NDIA APOLIS TIMES _ YANKS TAKE 7 il | DUREN SUBURBS

1st Army Drives to Within Half Mile of Big

Roer Fortress.

(Continued From Page One) let slightly to the west. Gey lies | four miles southwest of Duren. A Ataff officer of the 1st army compared the situation west of the| Roer with that on the Cherbourg] peninsula in July. Then the Amerjcans were “chewing up” enemy divisions and grinding down the defenses before the big Normandy port. The bitterest resistance was found in the area of Schophoven, five miles northwest of Duren. There self-propelled guns, a few tanks, and well placed machine guns late today held up the Americans along a ridge a few hundred yards east of the town. The Germans also were throwing in fanatic paratroopers fighting as infantry in the Gey-Strass sector below Duren. PEACE PSYCHOSIS They were. struggling desperately prevent the Americans from (Continued From Page One) | o.1i01ing themselves on the Roer loves peace but he keeps his mus- pank. ket ready and his powder dry.” Meantime, the American 9th army, He declared, however, that the already aberast of the Roer along a {practical pacifist in time of peace |front of 10 miles or more north of

The photo was made in the ad-

ADMIFAL WARNS OF

{who believes in national strength | Schophovens continued to build up {may be called “warmonger.” |strength for an impending attempt “It will take a lot of old-fash- | to cross the river. joned guts for him to stand up, Field dispatches said the Germans {against a popular ery for the de- have built three strong defense lines struction of the strength we have to a depth of & mile and a half from built up at such a cost,” he ob-|the east bank of the Roer. They served. : include zigzag trenches, machine-

Emphasizing the Navy league's role in the future, Adm, Carpender declared that those “who believe America’s future depends upen

accompanying change in the human sistance,” he said. situation” continued Dr. Niebuhr. Several hundred E. L. A.'S. troops “This is where religion SOI An. moving toward Athens from the Modern civilization is too optimistic. |, uy, were strafed by the Ro » yal Air We've conquered nature but we have Fores this Hhoriing.

Bot conquered death. The government forces withdrew

“We have acquired great knowledge in science but the element of |TTOm the military barracks in northern Athens. They also had to pull

. 3 1 mystery remains. The fact that a back from one block in the north-

{maintaining our national strength | . , must now consider the ways

gun emplacements, mines, barbed wire and cement pillboxes. The American 3d and 7th armies plunged through the last crumbling German resistance in northeastern France. They were within a mile to 12 miles of the enemy. frontier on a 50-mile front. Lt. Gen. George S. Patton's 3d | army swept across the Blies river)

of 3 Brothers In France Killed

(Continued From Page One)

maybe Gilbert was there, dropping bombs to aid their advance. Marion and Ray both entered the army Dec. 18, 1043, and both sailed for England at the same time. They entered France with the 3d army. Marion wént over seas as a private but was promoted to sergeant soon after leaving the

2

| states.

Ray's wife, Mrs. Mabel Wales Foreman, 2419 Broadway, was notified of her husband's death six day's before the telegram of Marion's death arrived. A BOTH MEN have small sons. Marion's son, Gary Devon, is 20 months old, and Ray's son, Ray Thomas, is 2. The soldiers’ father, Alpha Foreman, resides at Westport, where both Marion and Ray graduated from high school. Marion was 23 and formerly was employed by the Aluminum plant at Lafayette, He lived in Indianapolis a few months, but was living at Lafayette when he entered the army. ¥ : Ray was 27 and was working for the Allison division of General Motors before he was inducted. He formerly was employed by the Colonial Baking Co. , ” " »

GILBERT, the surviving brother in service, is 24. A B-17 pilot he has completed 36 bombing missions and holds the distinguished flying cross, the air medal and four oak leaf clusters. andl the presidential unit citation. He is the husband of Mrs, Evelyn Foreman, 1630 E. 55th st., and is home on leave awaiting reassignment. - Twd other brothers, John and William, ‘and two sisters, Mrs. Culla Foreman and Miss Cora Foreman, reside in Indianapolis. A third -sister, Mrs. Elinor Thor-

| son, lives in Columbus, Ga.

Link-Belt Employees Bring : i? Warmth, Joy to 40 Children

(Continued From Page One) Office or factory groups, clubs, sororities and other organisations may take children in groups, a8 many as they wish. . 0» .. . HEADQUARTERS FOR Clothe= A-Child are at 301 W. Washinge ton st, the southwest corner of West Washington and Senate ave. The office space has beéén furs nished through the courtesy of the Metal Auto Parts Co, Ine, and is now occupied jointly by Clothe - A - Child and the downtown employment office of Metal Auto Parts. 2

where is my other littla girl?” That other little girl wag standing next to her, but her mother didn't recognize her in her new outfit, After the shopping was completed, Link-Belt employees were sorry, Their fun was all over. » » » “IT CERTAINLY was worth losing a day's sleep to see the smiles on those kids’ faces,” one of the employees said. And when they left the Clothe-A-Child office, they made one sure promise: “We'll see you next year." In addition to the 40 children cared for by Link-Belt departments, direct donors were respon sible for the clothing of 18 others yesterday. Times shoppers, using cash contributions, clothed 27, bringing the total of children Siothed 50 far in the campaign to

WRECK ENDS DAD PLAN TO PLAY SANTA

(Continued Fromm Page One)

Tharpe’s automobile 150 yards up the track, but his body was thrown cléar of the wreckage. An employee of Ray's Automobile and Truck service, Mr. Tharpe had lived here for 17 ‘years. He had been mare ried three years. Survivors besides his widow and children are his parents, Mr. and Mrs. John W. Tharpe; five brothers, William Tharpe, :- Luther Tharpe, Robert Tharpe, John Tharpe Jr. {and Hollis Tharpe; a sister, Evelyn, and a maternal grandfather, Wil{liam Brown, all of Indianapolis.

® 8 =n THERE ARE two ways you can help Clothe-A-Child: You can send cash contribu tions to The Indianapolis Times; 214 W. Maryland st. Experienced shoppers will take the children to the stores and provide them with the warm clothing they need. Or; if you prefer, you may shop for the children yourself. All you have to do is call RI ley 5551 and ask for Clothe - A - Child. Specify the day and hour you wish to ship and The Times will have the child (or children {if you wita to clothe more than one) at the Clothe-A-Child office, corner W. Washington and Senate at the appoinfed time. The child's parents will remain at the office while you go to the store— any one you prefer — and make the purchases.

AYTO KILLS ANZIO VETERAN

ANDERSON, Ind., Dec. 12 (U. P.). —Services were arranged today for Noah Phillips, 28, discharged war veteran who was injured in an automobile accident Wednesday and died yesterday. Phillips was wounded at Anzio. His wife, Mrs, Glendora Phillips, 24, also was injured in the | crash,

Science can help ;

w olf Supervises | W AC Recruiting

CAPT. LOUIS C. WOLF, formerly in charge of officer procurement in Cleveland and Columbus, O., has been named commander of WAC recruiting in Indiana. Maj. Gen. James C. Collins, commanding general of the Sth service command, also ' appointed Maj. Lawrence W. Mills, former Indiana WAC director, as head Capt. Woll of the Cleveland area. Capt. Wolf, a native of Columbus, was manager of an Ohio life insurance company before entering service in August, 1042,

ieigs ema is Ty pm eastern part of the city under heavy nent element in the human situation. “The religious answer to the problems of life, which was préesumably superseded in modern culture, remains a permanently valid

answer.’ Greek government forces. Most Professor for 14 Years _ |were caused by E. L. A. 8. dynamiting. Dr. Niebuhr has been: professor of Applied Christianity at Union Shell Heart of City Theological seminary for 14 years.| within the last 15 minutes before He is the author of many books in-|ihis was written, at least 10 procluding “Christianity and Power jeotiles apparently 75's—landed in

Politics,” and the editor of the ith, heart of Athens. They splinmagazine Chrislanity and Crisis. |tered masonry and sent billows of

restore youthfulness The new lines were “described in military terminology as more nearly conforming to a circle and therefore more easily defended than the old. Several fires were burning around the perimeter of the British and

to face and throat * Would you like the skin of your face, your throat, to grow younger again? If so, try scientific ENDOCREME. ENDOCREME, with its 7-year record of success, is helping thousands to improve the very skin itself, not merely its superficial appearance. For thousands, it is doing this to a degree heretofore thought impossible. The secret of 7 ENDOCREME'S success is AcTivoL**. This AcrivorL** is the laboratory counterpart of natural, skin-vitalizing substance . . . a substance that decreases with age. Thus, when you apply ENDOCREME, it helps compensate for this loss. Absorbed under the skin's surface, acts to rebuild cells, tissues. Thus, ageing, dry, coarse, lined skins tend to become fresher, firmer, §moother, more youthfully attractive. How better can you invest your cosmetic dollars? Many report marked in only 30 days. .

=.

eream contain. ing ACTIVOL™

out of the depot. A tour of the store rooms shows the immensity of the operations. In tle cow barn alone are 700 car-loads of vital equipment. And this is put one of the buildings in which. the goods stretch in {and means of accomplishing that mountainous piles hundreds of | result. feet long and 20 to 30 feet high. | He urged a four-point program It takes men and women on the (for the Navy league including a job to move them. Men and stand. in favor of* universal military|ang captured Bliesbruck, five miles women the depot does not have. training, east of Sarreguemines and a mile EYE or ffom Germany. ; H h J Third army guns already were Charles Evans ug £5 r. shelling the Saar basin industrial centers of Zweibrucken, 13 miles ® * * {northeast of Bliesbruck, and St. To Head Willkie Memorials. ow mies noiness of va tered Saarbrucken. NEW YORK, Dec. 12 (U. P).—|and religious prejudices, advance- Smashing the aly Sus: of Sher a of ment of colored people, improve-|Mman resistance a e eastern- |: Gta aries Bvars RE . opt | ment of housing and better labor-|most tip of France, the Tth army| : * | employer relations. rolled to eight miles beyond the | chief justice, has been elected presi- captured enemy anchor bastion of | § dent of the Willkie Memorial build-| RUSHVILLE, Ind. Dec. 12.—Mrs.|Haguenau in a little more than | ing fund, the board of directors of Edith Willkie and Lt. Philip Will-{12 hours. Opposition in some Freedom House announced today. |kie, widow and son of the Hoosier gectars was described as “astonish-| His subject at 2 p. m. was, “The|acrig smoke rolling down University] Sumner Welles is the honorary] statesman, will confer here tonight ingly light. a | Cultural sid Religions evel of heist, the principal thoroughfare. |... | with members of the Wendell Will- | U. S. WOULD DELAY ll Dieation of thy| (Censorship or other ‘restrictive rye board also elected Harry kie Memorial committee of Rithe|™% >" Hn nd the Historic Situation.”| oc LF ¢8 apparently prevented g.,ormqn, vice president; Mrs. ville. PALESTINE FREEDOM Wman a © {Roper from explaining what had | warg Cheney, secretary; Herbert] The discussion will center around] WASHINGTON, Dec. 12 (U. P). happened since 9:30 o'clock Wst|goyarq Swope, treasurer; George proposals to erect an auditorium in| The United States government night. He filed a disaptch then re-| p,q executive director, and Her-|Rushville housing a world peace|believes that establishment of a free DORSEY [porting that British forces—and or Acar David Dubinsky, Marshall! library and an “open forum” radioland democratic Jewish common. Roper himself--were surrounded inipeq gpyros Skouras and Walter station. wealth in Palestine should await of Charactee ana ~ |the heart of Athens and the situs-|yyte directors. Tentative plans call for adminis-|the end of the war. Distinction Without {lion was “critical.”) Henry Luce, publisher of Time, tration of the project through a| Secretary of 8tate Edward R. (Athens broadcasts loday said|yife ang Fortune magazines, was projected Willkie Memorial Trust|Stettinius Jr. made that plain yes-| PLAN GIFT EXCHANGE e insurgents appeared to be | lected chairmen of a sponsors’|fund sponsored by an "intcrma-|terday to the senate foreign rela-| Mrs. Stephen Gaynor, 540 N. Oak3925 E. New York |tensifying their efforts to force a).,mmittee of prominent citizens. | tional commtitee” which would beitions committee. The committee {land ave. will be hostess tomorrow iRvington 1173 (decision before the British could| ye Memorial building, the board selected by Lt. Willkie. followed his advice and deferred ac- noon for a luncheon, Christmas move up reinforcements. They were onnounced, will house headquarters) The Rushville proposal is sepa-|tion on a resolution advocating the |party and gift exchange of the So-

L. §. Ayres & Ce.

IN THE FAMILY HAVE PLENTY OF

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FOR MEN, WOMEN AND CHILDREN ON

reported- blowing up buildings Ini,s organizations whose objectives rate from the recently-established some parts of the city, while the go the fostering of international Willkie Merhorial™ Building fund

i Jewish immigration and coloniza~ ARS 0 ARORA) O00 A A . } V SAX AX] Ad D0 ADE) OX) A British and Greek government) collaboration, elimination of racial! organized in New York. | tion. {hood of Locomotive Engineers BX A ARS BAA forces were losing ground in —— : 2 WAN NN

others.) Acropolis Chipped

A British official photographer who visited the Acropolis sad many of its ancient structures were chipped by bullets. The approaches to the Acropolis were under the machinegun fire of E. L. A S. units of the E. A. M. But the British apparently held the dominating height itself.

ITY HALL ADOPTS PLAN ON PERSONNEL

With speed as the keynote of a special meeting called this morning, Mayor Tyndall demanded and received immediate approval of a new personnel plan for the city government. The meeting of department heads was called suddenly to discuss recommendations for a classified personnel system. The plan was among the final reports submitted to the mayor by Fred Telford, city Job surveyor, whose services were ended Nov. 30. Overriding the protests of some department heads who wanted more time to consider the recommendations, Mayor Tyndall

clared: “We've got to act now. We've been studying this long enough.” One of the prévisions of the new

personnel system -is—that—depal iment heads Will be required to

1 3 y iy, submit tO Lawrence Parsons, city yo l PIAL, director, notice of inten- re to fire an employee. 3 i \ pl PLANES FAST AS SOUND Go

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Dn Edwe Great Formula For CONSTIPATION

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opening of Palestine to unrestrictedicial club of Mohumental division No. 128, Auxiliary to the Brother-

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