Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 12 June 1945 — Page 5
1045
SHIP PLAY,
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includes ok, Betty , Evelyn tte Cook, Piel, Mile Becker, olyn . Piel, rettion of
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TUESDAY, JUNE 12, 1085 London Cheers Blushing 'One Great Team,’ He Says TQ BATTLE JAPS
(Continued From Page One) |streets and cheered as Eisenhowet |
5 3 3 NE : S away Age ¥ 5
af
y mt THE INDIA
Tke: |CLIMB LADDERS
.(Continued From Page One) drove in a horsedrawh carriage’ :
among friends, he would, not dare | trom Temple Bar to the Guild Hall. Yanks Open Attack -on L Somipiels Zetvise Sa be given try to speak at all. | ‘It was.a scene where in the gen- | : : iT 1nSinalia. Da denis. But when he ‘did, it wds with eral's own words, the “Valley of | Okinawa Survivors. . both humility and courage, # He|the Thames draws closer to the] : spoke not about himself, but of farms of Kansas and the plains of 1 the men and women who fought for | Texas” —where he was born. | approximately 10,000 men elected to and with him, and especially of | “My most cherished hope,” Bisen- | soi : { fight to death. those who fell in this fight, which rhower said, “is that after Japan is now half finished. “lJoirits the Nazis jin Atter defeat, “We were one great team,” he |ngither my country nor yours need
Pe
| wrote the report. said disabl { ‘veterans seldom were given full explanation” particular ailments are
(Continued From Page One)
6:30 p. m. today «Okinawa time),| was spotless. o
sive. | was that service was too slow,
Kipling’ “neither London nor Abi-|pride should ever blind us to idenlene, sisters under the skin, will sell | tities in priceless values. If we “her birthright for physical safety, keep our eves on this guide post,
her liberty for mere existence.”
On the southeastern rim, Maj. Gen. Archibald V. Arnold's 7th di-|
{ there with “giving the whole hos pital a black eye” by “helpless cases” in order to com
have looked when he received hisiand so many others fields from second lieutenant's commission from | West Point exactly 30 years ago to-|
The leathernecks battled to close the enemy's southern escape route land trap thousands of Japanese-in!
Salerno to Iwo, could have been
itary aved division attacked the escarpment Then he stepped ¢o the micto.) And as the military band played
: ’ Aral : SE ap-. II serviceman. Be ree | Fisenhower had tea at Bucking-| The first battalion closed ap-| : 4 3p’ ol us Chbked frst | ham palace with King George and | Proximately 50 caves. It halted a Another patient thought is Yolce was choked up at st, Queen Elzabeth later in the day | force of Japanese streaming from | medical staff was “darned good Then he straightened his shoulders “la cave, chased them back inside; | and in steady, even tones voiced He was decorated with the Order‘ ' ? > :
United Press War Correspondent | Theodore Roosevelt and the phil- eigners. Edward L. Thomas reported from |
anthropist Gebrge Peabody, { The late David Lloyd George was | the front that Gen. Buckner's surHe said he accepted the distinc- a member, as is John Masefield, render demand went unanswered tion not only for himself, but on Britain's poet laureate. Buckness predicted the last Japbehalf of the 3000000 American® Lt. Gen. Walter Bedell Smith, anese resistance would be crushed men and women in the allied ex- Indianapolis, Eisenhower's chief of| “within a matter of days.” - "ed Mrs. peditionary force. : staff, will receive a high though less]
Meanwhile, Australian troops ad-| Thousands of Britishers lined the rare decoration at the same time. |vanced into British North Borneo!
cami —————— {as smootlily as on maneuvers. | DONT LET YOUR, | The-Australian 6th divisiorfiyove| \ : : HIGH COURT RULING | rapidly toward Brunei, capital of GHTER — 1 (the little “Sultanate of
my money.” & x 2
» 5
pital
Winifred Warren, physic-therapist.
1e same
I and world war II veterans.
State: Commander Brown, who
of what their
‘At the time of The Times inWhen Buckner’s offer expired at| spection last week, the hospital
said v i it d orders were flashed to all U, S.| Patients interviewéd held opie : Strain Ver Again Summon its sons and g:ijlery and warships to: resume. posing views on 160d: some praise: | Fisenhower bade Bade Britain, |daughters from their peaceful pur- fire. y P x hie on others rs the U. 8. and their allies to hold suits to march to the drums of They blasted interlacing Spanesel it off as “average,” or “not so Jopothes 85 3 Jean 1) peace 33 wel Mars, WT fortifications and caves. atop: the hot.” : # 35 1 War, ; No petty differences in the world, plateau in an all-out ground offen- The most general complaint But, he warned, borrowing from of trade, traditions, or national
{ One patient protested one. or | two “unco-operative staff physi-
ignoring
| i ny yur aw 9 Area B plete their clinical check-ups of | day. shete, they wouid have been Droud|heir “lost world stronghold. | patients with less serious ail- | Memorized Speech and hopeful this soft June morning.!| Maj.-Gen. James L, Bradley's 96th | nents.
the
young doctors in the country for |
AMONG INDIANAPOLIS hos- | patients queried by The | Times, two.voluntarily commeildthe
Varying opinions cn hospital | recreation brought into ‘focus 4he. | ever-present, und er-the-surface | conflict there between warld war |
Ek
wi
NAPOLIS
TIMES
men took issue with the hospital's strict prohibition against “harm- |
to : less gambling.”
The hospital is not overcrowded gd 2
a~-half-doliar building will soon begin to prepare for an anticipated heavy influx of world war II. disabled. This program
|" said Manager Moore, | “He propeses to move the clerfcal and- claim divisions of the
a downtown office building if ade- | quate space can be located. Mr. Moore, conceding that help is. scarce and poor, blames it on
; vision ascended the rocky slopes on | cians who, he said, sometimes | the hosplial § original Jow prone |"hen no difficulties along our path rope Jadmers and smashed forward| threw the medical treatunent | TOMBE. Now v's heen Donsted. by . The great sword which Lord of mutual co-operation can ever be in = troftel sssault. chediile oot’ of ‘Whaek . | “the cream of the crop have Mayor’ Sir Frank Alexander handed | insurmountable. 1 The Tth's offensive Was based oh) > : i already found better-paying jobs.” him was one thatthe Duké of “A Peaceful Feeling” strategic hill 95, a half-mile “orl, 5.8» | It's extremely difficult to persuade Wellington carried into the battle} : ! Seba ’ THIS PARTICULAR veteran, | attendants, especially women, to wn Moreover, when this truth has of Qushican wounded in North Africa and | remain.. This was just a loan, though, be- | permeated to “the remotest hamlet! = « "Lost World’ | holder of the Legion of Merit | #. & 8 cause the sword which the city is and the heart of all peoples, then, At the opposite end of the plateau,’ medal, said he waited seven hours | THEY WOULD prefer to work having struck for him is not ready indeed, may we beat our swords Maj. Gen. Pedro De Valles 1st ma-| once for medical attention while | in army hospitals where more yet Linto plowshares aiid ali nations can 2° division advanced across rice| he had a temperature .of 103 de- | youthful, world war II veterans When he took it, Ike blushed and | : y on ! paddies and’ fought upward along! grees. ————+2gome under their care, he pointed grinned and except for his balding |enJoy the fruitfulness ofythe earth.” Kunishi ridge, western arm of He charged certain = medicos | out. head he looked as bovish as he must] If the boys who lie in Flanders! Yaeju-Dake plateau.
- 1 “Few stay long enough to learn ahything,” he said. Mr. Moore said he had tried to obtain expanded transportation services to the hospital. but | serted Indianapolis Railways had | blamed the slow and round-about
- as-
. +f “Maybe: they'll say I'm just the | “ y jo. | I / : 2 96th ’ vs v ’ i cross-town bus route on ODT . . } A the “Battle Hymn of the Republic,” | frontally from the north. The : ; Ame : c e phone, clasped his hands hard be- arid then “The Star Spangled Ban. | Systematically sealed caves with Jive thas SHipes, but Me 0 } rules. hind him and made his short ner” a powerful feeling gripped | Special flamethirowers, fed through 89 here 24 To ay for He pointed out that both the speech. He had memorized it as your heart and you knew vou were |0Ng nozzles from the tanks below months on end, you egin to no- | American Legion and the Vetfaithfully as a college valedictorian. u ¢ 7 J g ; | the escarpment. tice things.” said the world war : He skipped only a couple of para- “ere
| erans of Foréign Wars maintained { contact officers at the hospital. He said he thought the service or- , | ganizations should shoulder part
what there is of its” One veteran | of the responsibility for any op-
his thanks for the honor which has Of Merit, the first American ever| then genie i in SseRTpmeny| said * the chief surgeon “worked | erational faults. been granted only to four other 0 receive this honor. There are CLS With explosives. himself to death and lauded his BI Ww shin Americans before him—Gen, John only 24 British members of the! ‘Matter of Days’ | assistant. as “one of the best ame as ington J. Pershing, Presidents Grant and order and a mere’ handful of fce~
| For Control Errors
Reporting to the house veterans affairs committee in Washingtoii, the American Legion and V. F. W. expressed varying opin-
Ind. Veterans’ hospital. The V. F. W. said “An under cover investigation of alleged ‘mistreatment of patients by af tendants is recommended. Such allegations cannot be proved or
'name, after landing on beaches The younger men want more | disproved by any ordinary in: MAY AFFECT STATE pare of the enemy, | sports and qutdoor pastimes. | spection, especially in view of the <> BENS | At last reports, the Australians| While congeding it would be im- | mental condition of the complainFy without... ~ Indiana officials today were won- {were at most 11 miles from Brunei, Possible to.engage in baseball and | ants.” Telling or There dering whether a new U S. supreme and rolling through opposition de-| football games, they thought a | The American Legion spoke court ruling conclusively validates | soribed as
Intimate Physical Facts Your daughter has a right to know how | important douching with such an effec. tive product as ZONITE often is to fem-
“negligible.” Other developments in the Pa-! cific were:
few might be played occasionally on the spacious hospital grounds. At present, there are no diamonds
an Indiana law levying a higher | tax rate on out-of-state insurance] premiums than is levied on “home” |
'AR—O ; ,; or gridirons. {nine cleanliness, health and happiness. | insurance companies. Al} Wa ve. hundred Bry World war II convalescents It may spare her years of unhapp : { Superforts, the entire 58th bom- | tained th little t in married life ahead. The supreine gourt affirmed as pardment wing of the 20th ‘army folnp ane ore is H ew do Weak, homemade mixtures of salt, | CONStitutional yesterday an Okla- | gir force, have joined Marianas- but listen to radio programs not soda or vinegar po wor and can wor | homa gross premiums law a
ve the great germicidal and - oo ton of Ashi Yet a eotar a 4 per celil tax on all pr SArE—even to the most delicate tissues! | COllected by out-of-state in In fact no other type liquid antiseptic- companies, germicide for the douche of all those | Ind tested 1s 8O POWERFUL yet 80 HARMLESS. | Beane
SSessing | pased B-29s after 3600-mile mass °F per D913 Shoosis. Fisy check emiums | fight from India to Tinian without! ©f° 8nd cards, atten movies in surance | . . the auditorium, read, visit jhe lass of a single plane. canteen or stroll in the halls | Porty P-47 Thunderbolts and| ra y S.
taxes out-of-state con- other fighters attacked air fields To this world war I occupants
l POTTY 2 . . ) unter: “W 1 i ZonrTE—discovery of a famous Bur- | C€ITS at a 3 per ben rate, Hooste! jon Kyushu this morning. accord-| is i What else could we geon and Chemist—destroys odor. Helps | companies pay on yY 1 per cent. The} > hi | : ? 10 Watney Trace Ton 0 oe (Ing to Tokyo; while 40 Super-
: : | p 1t touched. You know It's ach or | rate differences were the subject of | fortresses laid mines off ways possible to contact all germs in (MUR discussion during the last| Tok Ihe frase But You CAR BE EONS EONIEY {legislature when the assembl mmediately kills all reachable germs: | « Use as directed often as you wish with. | 2556d to abolish
#& = =» ON THE AVERAGE, world war I vetérans comprise about two-
the island. yo also reported 30 Superforts Y Was! dropped mines in Wakasa bay on
“discriminatory” | Honshu's' west coast just before| thirds of the hospital's occuout risk of tjury! All drugstores. | insurance taxes by representatives| midnight. pancy. World war II veterans . Zo pr | of out-of-state insurance firms. No| . yJAPAN—_Both houses of the Jap-| &r¢ still very much in the mi~ 3 72 e J faction was taken, however. anese diet formally surrendered| POTIY.
The most common recreational gripe was aimed at- the centrallycontrolled hospital radio system, directed by the recreation chief. Patients can tune in on this institutional .net-work at any time during the day by means of earphones attached to“their beds. But they complained, it's “either
their powers to Premier Adm. Kan- | taro Suzuki today at the close of an extraordinary four-day session convoked to mobilize the entire nation for invasion. Suzuki erherged from an unexpectedly . bitter parliamentary debate armed with dictatorial powers for the duration. of the war.
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Simultaneously, radio Tokvo re- all news or all music.” More 4 at ta a ’ variety was demanded. vealed that the diet in its last of- “She (th tional ief ficial act passed an emergency mo- iv . Se recs ona 1 chief) REMOVES bilization bill conscripting all males| 5c; US Eranc opera when we
wa ‘se op J" sai - from 15 to-65 and all women from nt horse opera,” said one com
5 ant ther was" bi Whisks off 25 to 45 for service in a new home | Dinan — re hier Sve deg hair |guard. Ultimately, the age brack- he 1041 we rd’ sari o5) same fsavessiin jets for .women will be revised to| "© wong series was tuned alluring 117 to 40 Tokyo said out to make way for an afternoon
¢ devotional program. CHINA — The Japanese bounced Hi
back from.a long series of recent Chinese victories and launched strong counter-attacks. ‘The enemy recaptured Ishan, 43 miles west of | Liuchow, which the Chinese had] taken just two days ago. The Chinese also were driven from Chungchingfu, on the Indo - China| town, on the mainland—the first border. {two towns captured in the operaPHILIPPINES — Troops. of the tion, 11th corps eaptured Santa Ines, 24) The Jap
miles northeast of Manila in the | landing Marikina watershed.
| Luzon, the Cagay | stalled temporarily.
|
| The Borneo invasion, which Gen. | hard-pressed to garrison their many | | Douglas MacArthur led Sunday conquered territories after their | morning, went off with remarkable battle losses, were not in too great
ease. strength in that part of North The Japanese ‘apparently had Borneo.
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n ” ” sBED-PATIENTS wanted movies in the wards and more magazines and newspapers. Several of the
anese first reported a attempt in Brunei bav In northern early Saturday. although H-hour an valley drive was not until Sunday morning,
Block's, Wasson's,
Sears-Roebuck, all Hook and other good drug stores.
Everyday, thousands of busy men place their com. plete confidence in an Eastern Expediter to arrange their necessary travel. They know an Expediter can be relied upon to arrange the best possible passage =~to go really "all out” to it them where they have
to be when they have to be there.
When you must travel... call Belmont 3330
known it was coming because they | blew up everything of any value in| Victoria, on Labuan. and Brooke- |
| It appeared that the Japanese,
highly of many Marion hospital | facilities, saying: i “As - to general and specific complaints, there have been { cases of consequence for than two years.” | The Legion observed that the | | institution was overcrowded and | needed 165 more beds. But; it | commented, “relative standards of
no | better
treatment are far superior as com- | pared with state, county and mu- { micipal institutions in this area.” | | Pay and canteen facilities, how- | ever, were criticized as poor. The { Legion thought -the institution “suffers too much from Washing- | | ton control.”
It carries a bed load of 345 patients, but only 288 are registered | now. Nevertheless, a million-and-program |
should double the bed- capacity,
state veterans administration to
i ions on operation of the Marion, | t-along for awhile.”
i ness
lin person.
{ John Hartford for $4000 which was
| Corp. said today.
Vet Hospital Is Handicapped TELLS OF LOAN 1 By Low Pay, Legion Charges TQ.
OF. D.R.'S SON
Settled for $4000.
(Continued From Page One)
money to expand his radio proper: ties,” Ewing said. The lawyer was here In conneetion with «the government’s anti-trust suit against A & P. “He tame to me on recommendation ‘of Bill Sirovich (the: late Rep William 1. Sirovich, New York Democrat) who was a close friend of mine and also of the Roosevelt family,” Ewing said Option Expiring “Sirovich told - me *thdat Elliott needed the $200000 to buy into a radio property on which he had an option’ that was about to expire.” Ewing said he asked “Why doesn’t Elliott go to a bank?” Sirovich answered that his securities were not bankable. “But I tell .you his securities are worth $750000" the lawver said “I ask him why didn’t Elliott go to radio people for the money and Bill Sirovich "told me that they couldn't deal with him because he was the son of the President and they didn't want to get involved, Ewing said | “So I made a date for him with John Hartford in Hartford's New York apartment.” Ewing said Hartford told him it was a terrible thing “if a voung man is handicapped' by being the son of the President.”
“I wasn’t present when the con{ference was held and so I don't know what took place,” the attorney said. - “However, the next day Hart{ford told me he had talked to the | President and that he was going to lend Elliott the money. | WI wrote out a note and we named {as collateral security the stock of the. company Elliott proposed ° to buy. I trusted him with a check on ‘the promise that he.would de{liver me the stock—which he did.” Ewing said the situation “rocked { “Hartford didn't want to go into [the radio business, so we just let
the thing"slide]” the attorney said. |
| Entered as Bad Debt “In 1942, Jesse Jones came .to us and told us the Roosevelt fangily wanted to compromise the indebtedIt was settled satisfactorily to all parties so I took the note and the stock collateral to Jesse Jones
“He gave me a check payable to
all he ever received on the loan. and the whole thing was closed. Hartford took the whole thing as a loss and entered it on his 1942 income tax report as a bad debt.”
125 WARPLANES 0.K.D WASHINGTON, June 12 (U. P.) .— The civil aeronautics administration has approved 125 types of surplus military aircraft suitable for civilian flying, but has found more than 130 models unsatisfactory for civilian use, the Reconstruction Finance
SAYS JET PLANES USE TOO MUCH FUEL
LOS ANGELES, June 12 (U. P.).
—Jet propelled airplanes as now
designed consume too much fuel
A&P Man’ Says $200,000: to make them' practical fomcivilian
use
, Dr. M. J. Zuérow of Aerojet {Engikeering ‘Corp. warned ‘today AL 2
The . commercial future of - jet
A
| |
i Let your geet go cool and comfy
Hosier Y, Str eet ’ 1
_ PAGE 5 |
{propulsion depends on the ability
f designers to find a way to make the jet engine—now’ restricted to use in short - endurarice military craft—practicablé for peacetime use. Zucrow told the aviation war conference of the American Society of Mechanical Engineers. Zucrow sald advantages of the jet engine were its higher flight peeds, simplicity, low. weight and reedom from vibration
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