Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 18 April 1945 — Page 5

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Tells Arwied Forces He Will Follow Tradition. (Continued From Page One)

during small talk before the Pres-|

ident’s first press conference, » Mr. Truman smiled: and advised Smith just” to wait until he really §0t down to business, Some of the older Washington hands were recalling the famous Coolidge breakfasts. Government | leaders—mostly congressional—fre-

quently sat down to pancakes and probably were his sharp refusal to {discuss changes in government personnel and his nomination of John |

sausages with Coolidge.

Sometimes there was business to

former President

Perfect for Springl

RINGLET PERMANENT

win elfin bob”

Bomplate 58.00

“Bifin Bob," $1.00 vp

MORRISONS

20 W. Washington S50. eh LL 00M Rn, 2507

4 Mr. Truman served in the 129th.

‘| tary of commerce to make room for |

-{vited out;-for a bit,

A A EE HR HT

3

reused,” Sometimes yok. But jréakfasts always were ary. Failing breakfast guests, Mr lidge might go strolling at’ 17 o m. Former President ' Herbert C. [Hoover had -his “medicine - ball” {cabinet. Those early risers used to [path when I got to London” ve meet before breakfast in the rear! uipped. “I just wasn't used to of the White House and heave the ish herringbone. coat he dug out Fring after France.” ball around among themselves, Mr. lof a suitcase he had cached some- After “sweating out” another. in- | {Roosevelt lay long abed and |Where in Washington 18 months ior view Ernie went to lunch with | reached his office around 10 a. m.|earlier. The coat had been darned | some of -the boys from the office | for later. ; {on both elbows. land told us of some of his war ex- |

| WNominates Former Comrade We herded around him and he|jeriences, and some of his thinking |shook -hands, embarrassedly, 100k-|gs to the prospects of victory.

With his first press conference |; o a little: confused at all the at-| “Don’t think the war's over until oehind him, Mr, Truman named a (tention. the shooting has stopped,” was his world war I buddy to high office,] When a photographer suggested sage admonition. ordered seizure of a Louisiana re- [taking some pictures, he wondered Even before the war, back before finery and topped off a 14-hour day |!f we couldn't use one of the prints he became an international celebrifrom a picture-taking session he|ty, Ernie used to come back here! {with his talk to the troops. had “sweated through” in WashMost significant developments | ington. Fame Hit New Heights He dropped in ‘the office again in | | September, 1944, when he came back and the people he met.

after the invasion of France. On one occasion, he came back His fame had hit new heights jaded down with notes. and went since his previous visit, but he was | straight to the Hotel Warren. He! still the same old Ernie—unpreten- «poled up” there for about a week, tious, unaffected, and with the same | grinding out enough olumns to shy, friendly dignity. hold him for several weeks. At that time, he seemed pretty| On another occasion, he accepted depressed; said he felt-all right {the use of Fred Bates Johnson's physically, “just tired and bruised | (cabin down in peaceful Brown inside.” county, in order to catch up with He had a cold which he couldn't his notes. |shake. Indiana was home “That's what I get for aking a’ ster Vagabond.

~ Shock to Times Staff,

(Continued From Page One)

Pyle's 5 Death: o

written. That was in the days when he | {was traveling over the country,

writing about the things he saw W. Snyder; St. Louis banker, to be

federal loan administrator. Mr, Truman's” world war I pals will be much in the news henceforth. Snyder was in the 128th field artillery of the 35th division.

Snyder also- is a veteran of ihe Jesse H Jones organization here, Jones was fired by- Mr. Roosevelt as lodn administrator and secre-

Henry A. Wallace, Jones’ jubilarft &pproval of sny- | der’s nomination was proof enough ! that left wing hope of dominating the powerful lending agency had

to the Hoo-

vanished, Wallace got the com- | merce department, . Jap ‘Suicide’ Base “The President couldn't have| ap I! From Page One) T0 PACIFIC BEGUN

made a better appointment,” said! : Jones of Snyder. {Okinawa in a bid to obtain more Meantime, if ghere is any dis- (airfields. Pacific fleet headquar-| position on Mr, Truman's part to|ters did not mention the landing rayon, hope that speculation about cab- but said Ie island, just north, had | continue. inet changes will cease, he may vest oihinas Seared. | ica 1300 Curtailment of B-17 Flying For48" . , i m Ss as" well become reconciled to one %. 2100. Japanese in the hills of [tress and B-24 Liberator bomber

of the misfortunes of holding high office. The speculation will con-|Motobu peninsula in the northern | production was interpreted as tinue. sector. The Japanese counter- Pointing to revised plane requireThere is a positive feeling that attacked four times yesterday in a [ments for the Pacific war. there will be major ‘changes in |battle for an important hill. The | It is believed phat the high comtop places. The first 100 days may Marines counted 300 enemy dead mand will depgnd chiefly on B- -29 | pass without anything too startling [after finally winning’ the position, |Superfortresses’and the new B-32| happening as the new administra- | On Luzon in the Philippines Dominators, which have not yet | tion adjusts itself to power, At [American troops stormed into the (appeared in action, to carry the! least, no one is likely to be in outskirts of Baguio from which brunt of .the aerial war against Filipino guerrillas rescued more Japan, ; t _|than 7000 civilians in the last three | e army air forces announced | Eu the Ange hig vc weeks. | yesterday that the Ford Motor Co. State Edward R. Stettinius, As The rescue included a number of Will stop producing B-24 Liberator | friendly writers have suggested, the U. 8. citizens. Four ifhembers of | bombers. before the end of August. specifications for ‘a secretary of the Filipino collaborationist gov- The huge §100,000,000 Willow | state change when that official be-| |erimeiit™ were captured by the Run plant has tfirned out more! comes next in line to be President. guerrillas who slipped into the city|than 8200 Liberators since Sept. 10, | If Mr. Truman died tomorrow, Stet- (at night and brought out the eci-|1942

~ (Continued From Page One)

cotton, and leather will

rE United States,

tiniys would become President of | vilians in -groups ranging up tol 11800.

PR ————

—_— POLISH ISSUE. MAIN BLOCK TO HARMONY

| | 5 | (Continued From Page One)

Polish representation at San Fran- | | clsco. ;

This government and the British (have adamantly refused to accept |representatives of the provisional ‘government at Warsaw. The Russians have reiterated their insistjence - that the Soviet-sponsored | Warsaw Poles be invited for want {of a new, broadensd Polish government such as was prescribed at] Yalta.

Observers believed that President Truman instructed Stettinius to stand firm on the Anglo-American decision to insist on the new Polish government. Mr. Truman himself wil have a opoprtunity to discuss the issue whey Molotov pays a call at the|m h House before { San Francisco if © Eden and Stettinius thrashed over the Polish deadlock in a one-hour conference yesterday.

MRS. STAAB’S RITES | SET FOR TOMORROW

| Services for Mrs. Mary Ann Staab, | {who died Sunday in her home, 810 — ave, will be held at 8:30 A. m. tomorrow in the home and at 9 a.m. in Assumption <Catholic church. Bur‘ial will be in St. Joseph's cemetery. Mrs. Staab, who was 66, had lived in Indianapolis

|

4 since 1899, Survivors are Mrs, Staad her husband, Nicholas; three sons, Herman,

Leonard and William of Indianapolis; five brothers, William Seyfried of Portsmouth, O.; Joseph, Michael, John and Philip Seyfried, all of Indianapolis, and four grandchildren, Mary Lou, Lenny Joe, Charlotte Sue and Tommy Staab.

aE PRR TOES SEER

a

to rest and get some of *his columns |

| Mrs.

B-29 Raiders Blast SHIFT OF KEY MEN [ii mee sot senr

terday. Burial will be in Greens- { burg. Mrs. Cain, who was 89, had lived

| here all her life and was residing

tral chapel for

{ Burial will be in Crown Hill

| Harley:

A ry

SALESMAN 35 YEARS DIES

Paul L. Dreier En Employee of George Hitz & Co.

Paul L. Dreter, 3335 E. Vermont | st., died yesterday at the home of his daughter, Mrs. Herbert Murphy, 1017 N. Drexel ave. He was 60. A resident of Indianapolis 38 years, Mr, Dreier had been employed as a salesman at George Hitz & Co. for 35 years. He was a native of

| Germany. Surviving are his wife, Selma; | another daughter, Mrs. Louis Drexler, and a grandson, all.of Indianapolis.

DANIEL R. LEWIS ‘Rites will ke held at 2 p. m. tomorrow af the Conkle funeral home for Daniel R. Lewis, who died Monday at his home, 2927 W. Michigan st. Burial will be in Floral Park. Mr. Lewis, who was 76, had lived in Indianapolis 25 years, He was Splovey in the storeroom of the . & O. railroad shops for 15 years EO retiring in 1933. He is survived by Elsie Ernest, Indianapolis; a

a daughter,

(ville, and two grandchildren.

MBs, FRONIA CAIN ‘Rites will be held at 11 a. m. to'inorrow at the Tolin funeral home for Mrs. Fronia Cain, who died yes-

with a son, Elmer Cain, 3920 Hoyt ave, at the time of her death. Another scn, Ellsworth, Connersville, two grandchildren and two greatgrandchildren survive,

RUSSELL S. WRIGHT : Rites will" be held at 10:30 a. m. tomorrow at Shirley Brothers’ Cen_Rusell . 8. Wright, veteran engineer at Allison division, General Motors, who died Monday at his home, 4509 W. Morris st.

A member of the 101st aerial squadron, in world war I, Mr. Wright | began work in the Allison plant at the end of the war. He later worked an S¥ighon research at Wright field, ! 1, 0, and Wright Aeronau- | |e ES, at Buffalo, N. Y. and

State Deaths |

ALEXANDRIA Viola Hancock, 79. Sur-' vers: Daughters, Mrs. Fred Willets and Mra, Thomas Gilmore; son, Ernest,

BICKNELL-—Mrs. Maggie Everly Bard, 70. Survivors: Husband, Charles; dsugh- | ters, Mrs. John M. Pickey, Mrs. G. Dewey’ Henderson; son, G. E. Bard; brother, Mil-, ford Everly: sister, Mrs. John W, Temple; one granddaughter. BOBTOWN—William G. Bode, 632. Survivors: Wife, Marie: sons, Clifford, Dennis, Herschel and Orville; daughters, Mrs Violet Lauster, Mrs. Louise Sage, Mrs Esther Peters, Mrs. Verna Colvin and Mrs. Erma Horman; brother, Louis; sister, Otto, and 17 grandchildren. BOONVILLE-—Mrs. Odessa Byers Gray, 30 Survivors: Husband, Ben: daughter, Mrs. Helen Russell, sons, Harold and sister, Mrs. Bessie Tharp; hsifsister, Mrs. Gertrude Glaiser; five grandchildren. BRAZIL—Mrs, 82. Survivors:

Nancy Elizabeth Rector, Daughters, Mrs. Alfred Cooprider, Mrs. Floyd Holston; sons, | Serge, Lucian, Theodore, Rev. O. V. Rector; sister, Mrs. Anna Zenor; brothers, Howard, William Stoops. FT. RITNER-Clifford 3 Ribelin, * 63. | Survivors: W os Rose; hters, Mrs. | Thelma Dic n;- son, Eh ur; sisters, Mrs, Ada Green, Mrs. Arthur Dixon.

GOSHEN—Mrs. Mamie Mae Bible

| Survivors, Husband, Willard daigher.| L. Rise; sister, Mrs. Tug br hy Ray. Moore.

KEMPTON-—Mrs. Sina L. Forkner, 69. Survivors; Husband, Lora; son, Garnette: grandson, Lora David. MARION—Sanford Charles Remlinger 1 63. Survivors: Sons, Peter and Sanford: daugliter, Mrs. Jean Henderson: sisters, | Mrs. Bertha Verner and Mrs. Edna Bartlett; two grandchildren. VALPARAISO—Elias Anderson, 83. vivors: Sons, Edward, Elbert: daughters, Esther, Mrs. Vernon Ritter,

Adam Hats, $3.45 to $10. 9 N. MERIDIAN

You will be

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economy holds 4 months’ average

ih =>, , pea rnpreans TN, | Atnisen tn” 1934. trem Yer

gineer consultant for 500-mile races fra 1918 until the last race in

i NL rp

- ST Fh

He avurgeq tal Wayne

ihapotis Athletic club. sided im Iridignapolis 34 years and

Mr. Wright also served as en-

queline and his mother, Mrs. Eva | organization for 15 years, Wright, both of Indianapolis. | He is survived by his wife, Lillian; (a sister, Mrs. Myrtle Hall, Seymour, He worked with Mauri Rose THOMAS 0. BROOKS and three brothers, Roy, Indianap~ i years and rode with Howdy | Wiican in the 1918 race. for central Indiana Kroger stores, ward, Seymour. was a member of the West died today at his home, 1652 Pisher |

Bin Street Methodist church, st., Speedway City. He was 53. ‘Buchanan mortuary.

Men's Hats, Second Floor

LS. Ayes & Co.

ost, American" tar and A native of Seymbiir, hl ‘Surviving ° are- his daughter, Jac- had been affiliated with the Kroger

Thomas O. Brooks, meat buyer olls; Clyde, Connersville, and Ed- :

The body was taken to Flanner &

£3