Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 7 June 1945 — Page 20

PAGE Mrs. Pritchard Heads Group

The Civic theater affairs commit-,

tee yesterday re-elected Mrs, Harry T. Pritchard as president.” The group held the election during its annual garden party at the home of Mrs. R. Hartley Sherwood, 2847 ~N. Meridian st. Other officers are Mrs. Paul T. Rochford, Mrs. M. L. Martih and Miss Helen Coffey, first through third vice presidents; Mrs. Thomas L. Neal, treasurer,

Are Exchanged

Benton -B. Miller officiated. The: bride" is the daugtiter™ 0 Mr. and Mrs. Clarence 2257 S. Meridian st,

ton, Kearney, Neb,

Vernon, was the bride's only

as his brother's best man. ushers were William G. | storekeeper 3-¢, U, 8. N. R,,

Also, Mrs. Lindon A. Bailey ang | Wayne Lee Fields.

Mrs. Ralph Simon, recording and] corresponding secretaries, The |

Mrs. H. H. Arnholter, was assisted |

by, Mrs. Rosamond VanCamp Hill | near New Augusta. Members of the|

arid Miss Eldens Lauter. |

cs

I really takes

Welfare Club Session

i The Welfare club will have a gar-| nominating committee chairman,!qen party at 12:30 p.m. Tuesday in|

the home of Mrs. Richard Maxwell,

executive board will be in charge.

2 Woman who

“gan use her own Imagination

In the case of Tampax, ition is better than detailed description

NLY a woman can appreciate what t heinvention of Tam4X means to her hile passing through 10se “certain days’ « { the month—espeally in the warm eather season... This wodern form of .ofithly sanitary pro1 etion is worn inter. dly—and the user is 13% aware of its presice. This fact alone hould give : ha more poise and minimize her - nbarrassment and mental anxty ... Tampax appeals especially ywar workers or vacationists who ess in slacks or shorts. With ampax there is complete free- + ym from the bulky pin-and-belt irness worn with external pads. . ampaxn)is quick to change and ¢ 8y to dispose of, either at home

weather, is the absence of chafing and odor. With Tampax no sanitary deodorafit is required.

fected by a physician | and is used by many nurses—Dbesides the millions of other women who have discovered | it throughout the Americas and the other continents... Made

Miss Shirley Fields and erin) Tatum, petty officer 3-¢, U. S. N,, were married Sunday in the Olive] Branch Christian church. The -Rev.|

A. Fields, | and Mr. Ta-| tum’'s parents are Walter Tatum, |#s Indianapolis, and Mrs. Mable Sta-| $8

| Miss Edora Ann. Holmes, Nerth| ats | tendant, and Vester Tatum served! « The| Losey, and

orin public restrooms. | Butsost important of | all, in hot and humid |

Event to Be i

Tampax was per- |

{

f

at

Miss Irene Boughton (center) Women's Voluntary Services which will sponsor the navy war bond

review tomorrow night at the Murat theater. S. bond booth in ‘the Claypool hotel are Mrs. E. E.

the A. W..V.

Simmons (left) and Miss Margaret Wheeler. the bond booth on Friday each week and Miss Wheeler is serving on

the ticket committee for the review tomorrow night.

u

or

is president of the American Shown with her here

Mrs, Simmons captains

=

Indianapolis Chapter, A. W. V. §S,,

ices Hn

About The Indianapolis chapter of the American Women's Voluntary will sponsor the navy war bond review to be the Murat theater in connection with the seventh war loan drive, , ss Frances Kelly is serving as more highly

Mi

general chairman for oy sponsor- | Kennedy, Pauline Glagebrook, Paul

ship praeject. Sub-committees clude: Hostesses — Mesdames Ada Fisher, Mary Drury

Mitc chell and Miss Irene Boughton; | and Schantz,

i tick

ts—Mrs. Bertha Runyan

Mis s Margaret Wheeler.

of pure surgical cotton, compress.

ed in dainty applicators. Sold at drug stores and notion counters in 3 absorbency-sizes—Regular, Super, Junior. Month's supply will go into your purse. Economy box holds 4 months’ average supply. Tampax Incorporated, Palmer, Mass.

20 West Washington St.

Cotton for “Coolth” . . .

IRI

Committees Named

and Docia| will be

Arranges sii War Bond Show; Murat Theater

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES [Tatum Fields Vows Group Will Sponsor Bond Review

DUTCH EAGER 0 FIGHT APS,

Restless Aller Bondage, Thousands Enlist. ©

Times Foreign Service * AMSTERDAM, Holland, June 7. : |[—In the midst of its vast job of

§ | patching up the wounds left by five

years under the Nazi flag, Holland isn’t overlooking its far eastern colonies. Next-to allied and Dutch govern= ment relief centers the busiest spots in Amsterdam today are offices recruiting for the Japanese war. Holland plans to add at least 100,000 men to the allied forces in the Pacific and the rush of applicants is almost swamping the recruiting officials.

Empire Vital For members of Dutch resistance movements, the Pacific war means adventure and excitement for spirits made restless by years of matching wits with the Germans. For industrial workers faced with whole or partial unemployment un|til Holland's looted factories - can start producing again, the Pacific means escape from economic worry. For every home front Dutchman the Pacific campaign symbolizes another liberation—the Dutch East Indies. In the long run, the Dutch know {how much their destiny lies in their | Pacific colonial empire..

Want Pacific Duty 22,000 volunteers for

the

Serv- pacific will be used.by the allied staged tomorrow night command for rear-guard. jobs in

{liberated Dutch areas, to relieve

trained soldiers for

{ {

{

in=-! Tuttle and Aileene Reynoldis. Others on the ushers committee Misses Kathryn Messner, Bergman, Fay Zona Maze, Jeanette Arnbld, Beatrice James, Eldean ThompDoris

Lucille DePrez, Nellie

son, Marie Sifferlin, Sue Orr,

|

{ Money,

|" Door—Misses Louann Myers, Nel= Simmons, Dorothy Eberhart, Char-

lie Polley,

cille

Maze; publicity—Mrs.

| Haverstick.

| Ushers—Miss

phy,

{Jayne

Dorothy and co-chairman,

chairman; Perry,

Sylvia Simmons and Lu-| Helen

MacMur-! Miss Doris|

McLaughlin, and Dorothy|

Marian Grady

ine Tripp, {Catherine Ellers. An AW. V,

" = =

Third Floor

Stripes for Stature .-.

MORRISONS Cotton Shop

Store Hours 9:45 A. M. to 5:45 P. M.

STRIPES are starred in thoie

sweet 'n easy cotton COAT dresses

. Coat style for Convenience! Add them up for a sum total that will carry yop smartly and comfortably through a trying summer. Sketched left; A tailored coat dress in spacedstripe chambray; blue, pink, green. Sketched right:.

Red or blue pin stripe

~percale coat dress wjth billowy skirt and ‘two poiiais, embroidery trimmed, and in sizes 9 to 15.

Many Other Cool Cottons to. Choose From in Sizes for Juniors, ns Misses, Women — Seo to $10.95 ride rh

Both are eyglet:

»

{ will be presented and plans for furi nishing a day room at Wakeman | General hospital,

jw) preside, { ye Auxiliary to Elect | _Officers will _be . elected { by the 11th district, American Legion auxiliary. The session will be at 7:30 p. m. in the War Memorial building. The executive board will meet at 6:30 p. m.

Genevieve Weise, Elizabeth

{lotte Meyer, Eunice Bradway; Paul-

S. bond booth will With ha Jocated in the Murat lobby be- | Mesdames Helen Bruce, Helen Ard, fore the performance. {Irma Aug, Lous Clasen,

Miss Marian Virginia, | grip 4 will serve as booth chairman.

| The semi-monthly meeting of the i} A. W. V. S. will be held at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday in the Columbia club. | Reports on the navy bond review

Camp Atterbury, {will be announced. Miss Boughton

today |

front-line fighting. These service troops’ jobs will be filled largely by undergrounders, who already know how to handle guns and require little basic training. The majority of Dutch navy men and air force crews, pouring home {from service with the British, want Pacific duty—the sooner the better. Many of these Pacific volunteers {will be retained in the United States.

Copyright, 1945, by The Indianapolis 2 Jimes | and The Chicago Daily News, {

‘REPORT PLANE TO BRING BACK LAVAL

LONDON, June 7 (U. P.).—An Exchange Telegraph dispatch from Paris said today that a special French plane has left for Barcelona to bring back former Vichy Premier Pierre Laval for trial as a traitor. The dispatch said Spain has agreed to extradition of Laval, who sought refuge there after fleeing from. Germany by plane.

CLARK TO RETURN TO ITALY NEW YORK, June 7 (U. P.).—

mander in Italy, expects to return there within a week. Clark said vesterday he had heard unofficially that he is to be part of the occupa- | tion forces in Austria,

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Can't Run Germany Without Aid of Nazis, General Says|:

By ROBERT MUSEL United Press Staff Correspondent HILDEN, Germany, June, 7.—Ma. Gen, Ernest Harmon, first American military governor, in.Germany, said today that he had found it practically impossible’ to run the conquered reich without the help of some Nazis,

“I don’t like it personally, but until we get better men this is the way it has to be,” he said. Harmon was summing up his regime in an interview as he prepared to turn the Rhinéland over to British occupation forces under the terms of the Big Four agreement, Worked Out Problems

Harmon, who as commander of the 22d army corps reputedly killed more Germans than any other American general during the war worked out in important Rhineland districts many of the problems American occupations forces will meet elsewhere in Germany. Faced with a choice of letting German civilians starve and freeze to death or permitting a few Nazis to retain positions, Harmon said he chose the latter course. “I don’t like the Krauts,” he growled in the tones which won him the army nickname of “Old Gravel Voice.” ; Most Brains in Party

“But letting them know who won the war is one thing, and letfing them go without food now and without food and coal this! winter is another, “This country has been run by!

the Nazis a long time and practi-

cally all of its administrative and |

commercial brains are in the Nazi!

party. “You can’t run railroads with drug clerks or run factories with bootblacks. So in some cases we

Harmon's dotiaih comprises the three rich Rhineland districts of Aachen, Dueseldorf and Cologne,

stantly occurred in bombing reports Essen, Duisburg, Muehteim, Wuppertal, Remscheid, Oberhausen, Elberfeld and Leverkusen. Food Biggest Task Originally. the area contained about 8,000,000 persons. Now the number is nearer 6,000,000. Although it is the most concentrated industrial area of Germany, the Rhineland {is-only.20 per cent self supporting. + The biggest task has been to get enough food to the Germans. The Americans cut the German rations heavily and went to prodigious lengths to use every avail-

lable ounce of food. "They even

TONTTE—Adults, 5:45 'Til 6—30¢ Fred MASH deta ani Fonda

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It contains cities whose names con-

ne Gwynne I

An Basil Rathbone “MURDER IN THE BLUE ROOM” “HOUSE OF FEAR”

THURSDAY, JUNE 7, 1045

on sunken barges. Even so, there is barely enough now for subsistence, and officers. think things will get worse before they get better.

F.D. R. JR. ENDS 4 YEARS IN. ACTION

GUAM, June. 7 (U. P.) .—Lt. Cmdr. PFranklin D. Roosevelt Jr., third son

way back to Washington to become an.instructor at the war college toe day after four years of Active duty, He arrived here aboard his de= stroyer escort after 78 straight days of action off Okinawa, during which the vessel's engines never stopped. The ship bagged at least four Japae nese planes and rescued six Amerie can fliers. Roosevelt participated in’ ‘three straight American invasions, Luzon, Iwo and Okinawa. His only statement on arriving here was: “An awful “lot of boys out here would like to go home.”

1045 VIRGINIA AVE.

TONITE—~Adults, 5:45 'Til 6-—380¢ Abbott & Costello

“HERE COME THE COEDS”

NORTH SIDE VOGUE = College at 63rd

Free Parking Lot Roddy McDowall—Preston Foster “THUNDERHEAD” (in Technicolor) Wallace Beery “THIS MAN'S NAVY” 19th & June Carlson Stratford College Fifi D'Orsay TENT DAUGHTERS” | Bruce Bennett "0 U-BOAT PRISONER” 16th and Open Daily Delaware 1:30 P.M. Ray Milla nd-Marjorie Reynolds

“MINISTRY OF FEAR”,

Fred Maer rdy ldsieine Carroll

CAFE SOCIETY TALBOTT Talbott at 224 Fred Allen “LOVE THY NEIGHBOR" “ONE NIGHT IN LISBON” Westinghouse Air-Conditioned

had to keep Nazis who had the! --— 3 ton —

know-how.”

Celtic's LOANS

nm ’ I 5 to 15-Year Loans i! Monthly Payments | Which | ® Reduce Both | Principal and Interest Hl ® INCLUDE Principal and Interest | ® INCLUDE TAXES I and Insurance i

Competive Interest Rates

Marion County Homes Only

SAVINGS ¢ LOAN ASSOCIATION of Indianapolis

23 W. OHIO ST.

Gift Suggestions from STEWART'S |

Reward the graduates’ | achievements with a special! gift from Stewams. We] suggest the following— ® Address Books ® Men's & Ladies’ Billfolds ® Desk Sets ® Stationery ® Leather Photograph Albums and Writing Case

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R E x Sist & Northwestern Virginia Bruce "BRAZIL" { Jack Haley “ONE BODY TOO MANY" | ALL-STAR BOND RALLY WITH Bing Crosby, Bob Hope, Frank Sinatra

28TH AND CENTRAL Gypsy Rose Lee—Randolph on “BELLE OF THE YUKO Jean Parker—Jeanne gO “SERGEANT MIKE"

Cian

Abbott & Costello—Peggy Ryan

‘HERE COME THE CO-ED¥’

Ella Raines—Chas. Laughton “THE SUSPECT”

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Walter Brennan—Hoagy Carmichael

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Ella Raines—Chas. Laughton “THE SUSPECT”

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4 Revival Minutes of Fun and Frivolity With Donald Duck, Bugs Bunny, Pluto, Porky Pig, Popeye

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‘Private

465

LOS ANGEL Four hundr relatives of Gi ton Jr., today to a “private’ 3d army comnr home Saturda James H. Dool Officials saic ter, Mrs. L, 8. dale, Cal, th tions for the when she subir guests. The list of D not yet arrivec The homec being handled sal Hollywood

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