Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 17 May 1945 — Page 6

Rebs eR

AAR

' and efficiency of this internally

CHILD LABOR ABUSES RISE

youngsters 14 and 15 years old! = WASHINGTON, May 17 (U. P.)7land 2,000,000 more’ aged 16 and 17 SHARLEY BROWN

«The children's buteau of the labor

‘department said yesterday that the | many of the old abuses of child | wartime employment ot 1,000,000

jvears has brought a “return of

labor.”

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| three sons, Ludwig G., | George H., all of Indianapolis; nine { grandchildren

For 50- Year Resident Here.

Rites are.scheduled at 2 p, m. tomorrow at Edwin Ray Methodist church for -Mrs, Sharley Brown, resident of . Indianapolis 50 ‘years who died yesterday at the home of la daughter, Mrs.. Alma Forsythe, 155 N. 10th st., Beech Grove. Burial { will be in Carmel.

member of the Edwin Ray church {and was active in the hospital guild | land ‘ladies’ aid Societies of the | church. She was the widow of | George T. Brown. Surviving are ahother daughter, Mrs. Helen Gustin; three -grand-| ! children” and two great-grandchil- | dren. GEORGE BURCK | Rites for George Burck, butcher |

for the Meier Packing Co. for more than 20 years who died yesterday | at the home of his daughter Mrs. Love M. Quins, 5906 Dewey ave. | will be held at 2 p. m. Saturday at oe Wald funeral home Burial will be in Crown Hill. A native of Germany, Mr. Burck had lived in Indianapolis 53 years and was a member of St. John's| Evangelical. and Reformed church. | He is survived by the daughter; Karl T. and and one great- | grandchild.

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1

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| Betty Brown,

I beil, Louise Cerne, Howard Malham, Mar-

“* FUNERAL IS SET

Rites to Be Held Tomorrow

Mrs. Brown, who was 72, was a| HI SAAB rh kl HR | These three West Highland White Terriers will perform in the .

{ Tucker, Delores Sebanc, Wilma Belle, Pa- | tricia Mayer, Patricia Burris, Alice Watts, | Patty Russell, Norma Bennett, rod, Louis Griffith, Mary Gunnels, Evelyn | Tharp, Charles Trotter, Willlam Blevins,

|

| |

third annual obedience trial and tr

day. Named companion dogs following the completion of their first

| obedience title, they are owned hy Frame an i Sponsored by the Indianapolis Ob

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES Perform in Obedience Trials

Miss Fay Banta, all of Indianapolis. The show is being

THURSDAY, MAY 1m, 1045

For the Entire Family-~Over 25 Fears ;

IDA M. CRONLEY — FUNERAL FRIDAY |:

Dr. Carl J. Klaiber, 300-301 Kresge Bldg., 41 E. Wash. : Recently Installed as Shrine, ene Hours 9 to 12 and 2 to 5 (Call FR anklin 2247) Take elevator (0 3d 1000 pune

Priestess,

pre We Offer a Complete Optical Service } me

Services will be Held at 2 p. m. | tomorrow at the Wald funeral! home for Mrs, Ida M. Cronley, 728 | N. East st, Apt. 16, who died Tues-| day in Methodist hospital. Burial! will be in Washington park. Mrs. Cronley, who was 52, was la member of Heath = Memorial | church, White Shrine of Jerusalem |

6 and Naomi chapter 131, O. E. 3. She was installed as high priestess | of Tarum court of the Ladies of the | Oriental Shrine of North America

acking test at Tomlinson hall Sun-

Miss Marguerite Vance, Mrs. B. G.

133 HONORED BY WASHINGTON HIGH!

High honor roll * ratings were| , earned by 133 students at Washington high school during the past semester. {

They were: Anna Mae Mohr, James ! es, June Lalen, Martha Overman, Lu-| ie Dortch,. ‘Leonard Overton, Frances Sebane, Phillip Totten, Donna Reid, Constance Kakavecos, Mary Ann Kich, Ted | | Kiefer, Ramona Carter Lois + Duncan, Barbara Fleischer, Eva Mae Klakamp, | Robert Snodgrass, Chris Theofanis, Marilyn Tirmenstein, Mary Lou Gauble, ar] ma R. Mitchell, Jeanette Legg, Shirley | Lines, Carol Rose, Patricia Clester, David Hodson, Maxine Holcomb, Lowell Lentz, Alta Livingston, Kay Poole, Mary Lou Roder,.. Sybil Hendrix, Robert Pruden Martelle Morgan, Virginia Reilly, David | Wheeler, Lucille Ward, Margaret Whited Vada Pedigo, Betty Agan and Alice Dafoff.

Evelyn Dortch, Joanna Jennings, Doris Betty Ei

Juanita Delk, Doris Inkoff, Befty Lit. trell, Barbara McQuiston, Gordon Whit. aker, Olga Alexoff. Doris Davis, Helen Frost, Marjorie Haun, Joan Kerrick,, Frieda Soots, Doris Tompkins and Edith 1 Bernhardt. 3 Bernita Blunk, Patricia Lowery Harry Badger, Mary Kocjan, Joyce Fortune: Lawrence Albestt, Pred Behning, George Bever, Patricia Camp-

jorie Tirmenstein, Anna Kingery, Billy Niemann, Janice Wenning, Alice L. De~ Weese, Robert Hicks, Christina John, Jacqueline Smith, Jacqueline Brookes, Norma

Schnarr, Joan Parr, Duwanda Beile, Jac-|000,000 pounds of milk for 1945.

queline Duffey, Richard Hanley, Marie Higgins, Lillian Keely, Nada Lalioff, Raymond Lee, Paul Smith, William Strader, James Thornbrough, Patty Varvil and Betty Farmer. Georgianna Kakavecos, Betty Mitchell, Maurice Wilhoite, Patricia Barrick, Emma LaFara, Doris A. Maddox, Norma Ward, Rosemarie Warren, Rosalie Crisp, Patricia , William Harper, Dorothy King, Marjorie McCurdy, James Meadows, John Mohler. Francis Witter, Earl Garrison, Clark Griffin, F. LaVerne Montgomery, Robert Nichols, Thelma Eubanks, Naida Pétranoff, Donald Sublett, Herman | Wheeler, Philip - Pluris, Walter Rinker, | Patrice Plunkett and Betty Carmichael.

PYLE'S BOOK TOPS | MAGAZINE LISTING.

Times Special

NEW YORK, May 17.— The late |

{Ernie Pyle’s current best seller,

|

{ “Brave Men,” was the most popular

{book abridged by OMNIBOOK, the

{book ‘magazine,

during a 15-

month period, according’ to a recent fsurvey of civilian subscribers.

|

1

The poll of reader preference covered 60 books, and “Brave Men” was well ahead of the field as first choice of most subscribers. More surprising was the fact that {the famous war correspondent’s | earlier book “Here Is Your War,”

| abrid, ed by OMNIBOOK in its Jan-

{uary 1944 issue, ranked high in the

poll completed in April, 1945. M. M. Geffen, publisher of OM-

{NIBOOK, reveals that while the

{

armed forces were not polled in the recent survey, an unprecedented number of these men on fighting fronts have written voluntarily tol

[tell of their great enjoyment of |

{

|

|

Convenient. Payments . Easily Arranged

{ Mr, Pyle’s books, both of which were | published originally by Henry Holt | l&co.

* 4120 OFF OKINAWA

WASHINGTON, May 17 ¢U. P.)— {Navy Secretary James Forrestal re-! | vealed yesterday that casualties among naval support forces off Okinawa totaled 4120 up to May 14. | Forrestal said that 900 were listed | killed, 2746 wounded, and 1075! missing. The secretary said he revealed these figures to “make the people | of the country aware that continu-| ous support of a land operation is a costly and serious business.”

Now Available . . .

Under terms of Title Hi of G.I. law == to buy a home,

We are now taking dpplications for these loans.

For further information : call or write for FREE FOLDER — no obliga-

edience Training club. | in April, She is survived by Her husband, | | Benjamin G., retired captain in‘

'Tojo's Hotfoot' . the Indianapolis fire department; | Comes n Tank two daughters, . Mrs. Betty J.!

| Banta, Indianapolis, and Pvt. PaORK, May 17 (U. P.) —. | tricia -E. Quinlan, WAC, stationed To army service forces broke |in Jackson, Miss; a sister, Mrs. the secret of “Tojo's Hotfoot" tor | Verna Smith, Indianapolis, and day. | three brothers, Noel H. Bell, In-| The “Hotfoot” was revealed as |dianapolis; John T. Bell, ary, a thin-walled tank loaded with | and Boatswain's Mate 2-c Tark-| incendiary jelly and jettisoned |ington Baker, stationed at Peru, by planes over Japanese targéts, | 1nd. | Col. S. E. Whitesides Jr., com=~ mander of the New York district | MARY K. McBEE | of chemical warfare service, said {| Services for -Mrs. Mary K. McBee, some of the cigar-shaped tanks | who died Tuesday at the home of a are equipped with tail fins to daughter, Mrs: Charles J. Russell, aid directional flight. {R. R. 4, Box 346, were held this The tanks—in 75, 110 and 165- | morning at the J. C. Wilson funeral gallon sizes—are ignited on con. |home. Burial was to be in Stantact by a white phosphorus | ford, Ky. grenade igniter. Flaming jelly of Mrs. McBee, who was 83, moved the type used in the M-69 incen- to Beech Grove 34 years ago and diary bomb scatters on a path | resided at 114 8. Fourth ave. She 100 yards long and 40 yards Was the mother of the Rev. Carl wide, Whitesides disclosed. | McBee, Indianapolis. He said the idea was born in She is survived by another daugh1942 when a bomber pilot, after | ter, Mrs. Anna Miller, Fairland; releasing all his bombs, dropped | four ‘sons, James G., Lexington, Ky.; an extra gasoline tank that ex- J. Russell, Stanford, Ky. the Rev | ploded on the deck of an enemy |MCBee, and Raymond P., Acton; a warship in the Mediterranean. brother, James W. Brackett, IndiSn ———— | anapolis; two sisters, Miss Eliza HUGE MILK GOAL SET | Brackett, Indianapolis, and Mrs. WASHINGTON—The government Allie Farmer, Washington; 15 has set a milk goal of over 120,000, | grandchildren and five great-grand-

They tum up everywhere. . with the smartest clothes . . . these

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HERO 3

~ Sgt. Ro

Six 8. Sgt. Ex fought with from Austr is returning A veteral formerly li uncle, M Mrs, W. J. aghan, Lynhursy d

‘fore enter:

army in 19 is the son ¢ Selma Ro ‘Tell City. His first ‘Was seen five months ice when t Red Arrow sion was r tralia to he on Purt Mc took part i the jagged Owen Stan! of Buna wk threat to A D. §

At Sanan disputed gr at Buna, | guished ser nary herois for wounds After a Rossman a

its series of

sive agains struggle ta southwest I Sgt. Ross combat at the survivo sons tried safety. Then it Guinea; M lands East Wan ® The serge of Wabnitz ing Co., wa the Ormoc division cra and annih division. Por lead drive Sgt. . star and fc he was dec cluster to t His third heart was the rugged northern L When he ing to rest his mother TECH | NIGHT Classes © being held Tuesday an a part of services. of schools. The coun of the Civil to lay a fo aviation g! when class navigation, flight and be available Robert Of structor, a nautics inst classes at I

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