Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 22 February 1945 — Page 20

"and Fireman Harrod were treated at

4 5

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well-known 1¢ andle :

. Mis, Shackelford happily eontin-

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PEERLESS FIRE |_ 10S $250,000 8

—————————

Two-Thirds of Building on Ludiow St. Destroyed; | Two Overcome.

Damage was estimated at $250,000 by the Peerless Foundry Co. today | following a two-alarm’ fire which | swept through the building at 1853 | afternoon.

|

Ludlow st. yesterday The blaze, which started in the] the second floor de- |

about the | One hundred “employees

warehouse on

stroyed two-thirds of

building. were working in the plant but no! one was injured. { A strong wind carried flaming debris into a wide area and a row of houses near the foundry was threatened. Firemen were hampered when steel castings stored on the second ‘floor dropped to the ground floor. The entire roof collapsed as the heat melted supporting girders

gC

flag presented yesterday by Maj. A. tioned at Billings hospital. The fla

Iso : » 1902 W. Morris st.

BARBER PRICE - FIXING VOTED

House Passes Control Bill; Pay Hike Approved for Fire, Police Chiefs.

Records Destroyed

The -offices, all records, the ware-

house, assembly, machine shops

sheet metal department and steel

furnace division were destroyed

The estimated s believed .to be covered by ‘The Peerless pumps

jeeps

weturing hand for army amphibious ! addition fixing . bill repair parts fol

Two

making rnaces and The

in barber price furnaces

state the en-

.... described by opponents as ercome DY

firemen - were 0) smoke. Fireman Harry H. Harrod 50, 3207 N. Illinois st. and engine house 2, was the first casualty. A short time later Assistant Chief Roscoe McKinney was forced to leave the building when he was overcome by smoke. Fireman Hal Chamberlain, 36, of 1326. N. Emerson ‘ave, was blinded by smoke and stepped on a nail. He

tering wedge for other bureaucratic

of controls over Indiana professions

and business, was house today by The bill ould hours and regulate tions in all barber shops 4nder direct control of barber board. , Rep. Lothair Teetor (R. Hagerstown) condemned the bill as a “New Deal, bureaucratic attempt to set up a little OPA in Indiana.”

passed. by the a vote of 54 to 35. fix prices and working condiin Indiana

the state

City hospital and released,

To Keep Valuables Safe Rent a Safe Deposit Box at

% THE * INDIANA NATIONAL BANK

of Indianapolis

Salary Hikes Pass

The Senate passed and sent to the house a bill that would raise the salaries of Indianapolis’ fire and police chiefs from $5200 to $8000 annually which would be more than the mayor's present salary. Another bill pending in the legisla ture would raise the mayor's salary from $6000 to $12,000. Governor Gates today signed the { bill, passed by both houses, that {will take the Indianapolis park department ‘out of politics.”

A Loeal. Low Cost

HOME L i A i y | Mayor Loses Power

: . | The bill deprives the mayor of It's More |the right .to appoint department Convenient! employees and vests the appointive power in the park board. The bill becomes effective immediately. | Sponsors of the skip-election, bill, which failed to pass ‘in the senate | yesterday, indicated they wil. call ¢ INCLUDE Principal the measure down for another atan Interest tempt to get it passed before the end e INCLUDE TAXES lof the week. and Insurance { The bill would postpone until 1947 Rates {all city elections in Indiana now {scheduled for next year along with | county and state elections.

A Small Monthly Payments

* Reduce Both Principal ‘and Interest

Competitive Interest No Commission

Marion County Homes * \SUSPICIOUS MOVEMENTS’ LONDON, Feb (U. P.).—An Exchange Telegraph dispatch from Athens said today that “suspicious movements” were observed last night in. the vicinity of the residence of Regent Archbishop Damaskinos of

99

Of Indianapolis

23 W. OHIO ST.

EVERYTHING SHE ATE ~* SEEMED TO TORTURE HER, SHE DECLARES

MES. SHACKELFORD

t| what torture that is unless

L 3 1 Retonga Again Proves Meri have been through it.

By Bringing Prompt Relief In Stubborn Case. Can Hardly Wait for Mealtime Now. .

change other to get any effect. and discouraged. “Retonga gave me prompt grand .relief after” everything “I fem L from indigestior kept mc -feeling miserable «whole time for two years, thanks to Retonga I now feel fine self nibbling at food bet®een ‘meals again end never miss a meal,” de- 1 feel fine. Even that glares Mrs. W. Shackelford, | sluggish elimination, is relieved of

and

public endorsenicnt ef ,this noted praising it to someope.” herbal stomach and Vitamin B-1

medicine, Discussing her case, |tric - tonic libera

combined “with

“My appetite became $0 Poor I “gould, hardly stand

that af ti

~~

Vai ag

Charles Sepree, a pupil at- school 49,

-cent pupil participation in war stamp purchases. Clifford Riggs (left), commander of the Indianapolis chapter, 32, Military Order of the Purple Heart. also was present at the ceremonies in the school building,

they My elimination was so eluggish that I had to from one laaxtive to an-| 1 felt so bad all the time I was downhearted

and, / else me. that distress|1 tried had failed. *I can hardly. heartburn | wait for mealtime now, and everythe|thing seems to agre¢ with me and put! give me strength. I often find my-

terrible,

Route 1,|Retonga has first place ii my mediin a gratefull cine cabinet and I am always

Retonga is a purely herbal gas-

quantities bf Vitumin B-l4andYis intended ‘to relieve distress due to Vitamin B-1 deficiency, -constipa- | 4. har tion, insufficient flow of .digestive| ‘a 4 : in’ the stomach, and loss of | Je appetite, Accept no substitute. Re tonga ‘may be obtained -at all Hooks Dependable Drug Stores. —

SEVEN FAMILIES

GET GOOD NEWS

Relatives in Philippines Are : Freed From Japs, Hoosiers Hear.

relatives in been liberated from Japanese prison camps has been received by seven | Indiana families. { Indianapolis civilian prisoners res{cued include: | Miss Anna Carson, sister of Mrs, [Frances Pence, 1130 N. Emerson ave.

| Mr. and Mrs. Harley McVay, par-|

lents of Vernon J. McVay, 404 N.

holds -the schools-at-war |New Jersey st. F. Williams (right), air forces, sta- | The Rev. and Mrs. Joseph Smith, g is given to schools having 90 per {missionaries of the United Christian | Missionary society, which has head-

erick Smith. 4 Others From State a — Other Hoosiers rescued are: AT MONTE CARLO— | Miss Mary Serena Ogle, sister of Charles B. Ogle, West Lebanon. Mrs. Madge Schumacher, whose French Accuse {mother lives in Columbia City. . : Pfc. James E. Conley, son of Mrs. | J Mrs. Gould of | Susie Wooten, Hillsdale. Sgt. William O. Gadberry, son of : * . Angelo Gadberry, Sullivan. Helping Nazis Miss Carson, PARIS. Feb. 22 (U. P).-Mrs sionary, was a nurse in the Mary : ig = ra "Johnson hospital in Manila before Jad ould, weaithy Amer- we

Frank | eee jcan expatriate, was formally ac- AT FIRST

dealing with the

used Nazis French

today of

authorities announced that a detailed investigation of her activities during the German occupation of France was under way. . The ministry of finance, acting in concert with the United States | government, ordered the justice | department to investigate and t take eriminal action against Mrs. Gould if necessary. The San Franeisco-born socialite is charged specifically with investing 5,000,000 francs in a German-controlled bank at Monte | Carlo last July 21. She said she gave the money to the Nazis to | save her critically-ili— husband from a concentration camp. { . Mrs. Gould not only contends | J that she was forced to invest the money against her will, but also that she actually aided the French underground during the occupation. i

CHAIRMAN IS NAMED FOR JEFFERSON- DAY

Eugene B. Crowe, Bedford, to-| day was named state chairman of | the series of Jefferson day dinners | to be held throughout Indiana | April .13 ! The announcement was made hy | Frank McHale, Democratic national | committeeman. The local affair | will be held in the Claypool hatel. | About 12 to 15 dinners will be held | simultaneously at which time Pres- | ident Roosevelt will address those present on a national radio network.

USE $66 TABLETS.

STEWART’S Have OFFICE SUPPLIES.

Come to Stewart’s for the supplies’ and ‘forms your office needs for the 1945 changeover.

Filing Supplies Pay Roll Tax Records

Transfer Binder Desk Calendar Office Memo Stationery * Folders

Loose Leaf Forms and Binders of All Types

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Long-awaited news that their|igjand. the Philippines have|

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quarters here, and their son, Fred- |

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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES _ :

she was taken prisoner after the | Margaret Anderson, living in Dan-| fall of Manila. She has spent 28iyjjje..

Myears in the Philippines and is

al : graduate of the Methodist hospital] ACCOraing to the elegram received school of nursing in Indianapolis. jyes yy y eir A

McVay are in fair physical condi- | Supervised Utility

{ { Mr. and Mrs; McVay have lived| in the Philippines since 1929 and Vere were interned after the fall of

tion.

students at the

when the war broke out in China.

Manila. | They were transferred with the periences during 18 months service

Originally from Muncie, Mr. Mc- school to the Philippines to con-jin the India-Burma theater,

Vay was superintendent of theitinue their preparation for mis-

+ Ts power and light company on the sionary work,: They were interned |

He has a daughter, Mrs. Dec. 11, 1941.

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The Rev, Mr. Smith- and his wife will speak at noon tomorrow in the Peiping | Claypool hotel before members of language school in Peping, China, |the Indianapolis Exchange club.

AT EXCHANGE CLUB

Lt. Charles G, Bolte of the navy

He will discuss some of his ex-

Lt

THURSDAY; FEB. 22, 1945

Bolte is the son of J. Willard Bolte, a. member of the club.

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By LEE G . Times Foreign 54TH. GENER U. 8. ARMY, | Guinea (By Air M ago these 80 acre exclusively by tall glowth. Today th #8 3000-bed hospi moment some 200 occupied, The astonishing sprawling layout built from the g medics themsélve: of two officers am from the engineer “Our corpsmen anything,” said Cc well Jr, of Augu lar army medic w “We have. everyt sea divers to dyn tunately there ar [penters.” Deaths H

This 1s one of & ral hospitals in D and it is one of t anywhere, Since business last Oct. ome 8000 patien including 10 batt] died. Right now ab patients are. batt] he Philippines, tl malaria, dengue end so on. Tho

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