Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 15 June 1945 — Page 5
© J FRIDAY, JUNE 15, 1965 _ Th HE INDTAWAPOLIS TIMES bli ; 15, 1945 123 Die on U. S. ‘Saratoga G. I. BILL SLATED Senators Demand Probe of Fantastic Road Graft Charges BOARD REAF iS : h | In Seq Battle at Iwo Jima FOR REVAMPING (Continued From Page One) sition several manil ago. It has i solu tar Juvesigtive Som-, the ‘machine was active or idle NO- -POLITICS PLEDGE
Robertson said. “If it put in more WASHINGTON, June 15 (U. P.).|Committee Chairman "James M.| Robertson did not give the name is no excuse” for the attitude in than that it drew overtime,” he as-| _ Members of the newly-appointed (Continued From Page One) uf ‘After a rest in the states, the Chairman John E. Rankin (D. Miss.) | Mead (D. N. Y) as a lurid story|, ye company. some government agencies that “be- | serted. = tare board reaffirmed & declara|Saratoga returned to battle with| said 4oday that his house veterans unfolded on the senatev floor By| There were assertions that the cause of military security nothing! Robertson saide he got his acts” TF OAT TEA. THIEL BR (et carrier | vice Admiral Marc A. Mitscher”s| committee will begin Sion ie wu. white-haired Sehator Ed-| company rented its own bulldozers, tan be done when there is graft from Radio Commentator Pulton|tion of policy approved by the fortask . force. 58 which blasted. the next week of legislation which ward V. Robertson (R. Wyo), lett| tractors and trucks at rates so high and corruption by high offic als.” | Lewis Jr, | mer board two years 4go, at wn To 3 ie ea Gad Bagi me of et So ™ Pom at | othr rar, ste, © re esi oe Tr 3 . | aratoga is a r xten ana > av-| On that day off Iwo it looked rs Seal Ee and the Lexing-| One Des, ; t definitel e The sto ring about a firm | p On these “fantastic rentals” tt Chilef feature ofthe Latin: mets ing made the disclosures Ry he soiirtfiotse annex, for many hours as though they had|,,,, were designed to be 43,500:ton| consid “y I i ely to D ie $07%: SeniSTinG sbouvs firm was said to have made a profit an highway case was the ack of| Jomson sent Lews a telegram, Judse Mark W. Rhoads, of, juvesucceeded. The repair workers Iniy..ue cryisers but were converted pr ih rns Vis % So] which held a govertmient's contrat of 36 per cent over and above the the customary “recapture clause” | two weeks ago in which he pledged nile court, who appointed the board, the Puget Sound navy yard abi; oorrers as a result of the more days on active duty a $1040 © build the highway, was replete 4 per cent fee authorized or the inthe army's contract. Such a his “every effort to protect war madé a “no politicking” pledge at Bremerton said after looking the | | Washington treaty. (bonus as a “readjustment compen- | With instances of exorbitant charges $2,100,000 estimated construction clause makes the army owner of a department employees against puni- the meeting. Declaring that “The Sara” over that she had taken She was under the command of | sation.” to the government and misuse of COst. ? : piece of machinery once it has paid tive measures” for telling what they| department must be kept free of enough damage to sink “aly. othier| (Capt. L. A. Moebus of -Lima, O,| Under the G. L bil only unem- | materials paid for by U. S. tax- Hauled Liquor for it in rental fees. Knew of “waste and graft on -the | politics,” Judge Rhoads promised he ship. when she was hit off Iwo. [ployed veterans are eligible ‘to re- There were complaints that em- Robertson declared that the con. Latin-American highway.” | would make no political demand on
oy (Lay Yepaited heroin the see rec | ceive gompensation, which-amounts ployees of the firm used frucks Struction, firm's contract allowed rnin |the board, nor would he interfere
to $20 a week and is payable up to! The highway runs from southern hired So it to rent equipment to itself at GETS DY ER MEDAL in the operation of the department. The: ig Sartor vas providing ai TRIAL OF 16 POLES w maximum of 52 weeks. Mexico, where it connects with the hired. at government expense “fantastic prices’ and government| Dave Shaw, son of Mr, and Mrs.| Harper J. Ransburg, member of support for the marines
| Rankin said another bill the com-' Mexican highway system, to the bring loads of liquor to saloons, that! expense from the time they left Los|Joe Shaw, 715 Kappes st., senior at the old board who was renamed, after feturning from the first large | mittee will take up is his measure | Panama canal. It was started about | {government property was used to Angeles until they were returned Manual high school, .has been was re-elected: president, and Robert ‘garrier - strike at Tokyo. THREAT T0 PARLEY to exempt veterans from the “closed | 10 vears ago by the public roads: build a hacienda and an eight-mile there. He bittingly referred to it awarded the Dyer medal for the | A’ Adams, new member, was elected " She was cruising with a fast car- | | shop” provision of labor union con-|administration, taken over by the |road leading to" it for a, firm fore- gas “a new type of portal-to-portal best mental attitude in four years|yjce president. rier task group northeast of the | LONDON, June 15 ,(U. P).—A | tracts “This bill will save our boys|army shortly after Pearl Harbor as man. pay.” : | of sports. Judge Lloyd D. Claycombe, of bloody little island when nine or) spokesman for the London delega-| from labor union regimentation,” he|a defense installation to aid in The implications of the recital He told of five-ton trucks rented a ———————— circuit court, administered the oath + 10 suicide bombers picked her out tion to lie. Polish ionterence in | Asserted. - |guarding the Panama canal and’ left the senate gasping. There were at a rate of $500 a month and com- OFFER ‘4-F FOLLIES’ lot office to Mrs. Addison J. Parry,
and began attacking at 5 p. m. . : The veterans committe |turned back to the roads admin- demands that all contracts let t > r i i Lull After Sixth Hit | Moscow said today that Russia's | e voted to § let by pletely paid for every seven months. The Lawrence Lions club will pre- Henry J. Mugl
yeller, Mrs, Zella L. {put off its investigation of veterans m—————————1!the anny in the Alaska highway, He told of caterpiller. tractors |sent the “4-F Follies” at 7:30 p. m.| Ward, Mr: Ramswure and Mr. The “Sara” was launching her own | Impending trial of 16 arrested Poles | hospitals a week so it could get | liberal veterans’ bill in history,” had | Pearl Harbor and Panama €anal which rented at $775 a month and/tomorrow in the Lawrence Central Adams.
lanes when the assault came seriously imperiled the success of! {down to work on some badly-needed not worked out as satisfactorily as|projects be “re-examined.” paid for every 11 months. high school auditorium. John Mec-| The board reappointed Arthur B. plan SS . | legislation. Rankin said the G. I. he had hoped and remedial legisla- Senator Homer Ferguson (R.. Each refital fee was based on a Cormick is general chairman and| Wooden as welfare director as ‘one
Ivey . the meeting. Her guns and aircraft shot down bill, passed last year as “the most tion was urgent. Mich.), hard-working me 2 official acts. four of the attackers, Four others| Representatives of the Polish exile] Te 8 g member of 240-hour month and paid whether Charles Garrison Jr., director. of its first
got through and made crash hits.| government in London, which Was 000000000000 m
A fifth, knocked down alongside, not -invited to the conferénce, v
bounced crazily on the waves and bluntly denounced the Soviet an- | slammed into the carrier. It ex- nguncement of the trial as “politi- | —
ploded and ripped a large hole in eal blackmail typical® of Russian | with GIFTS from our
COMPLETE MEN'S STORE
planes sank the “enemy Ryuzyo in the Solomons. The Japanese wanted desperately |
| ayers and war bond buyers. |
A sixth enemy plane scored a| Radip Moscow announced last bomb "hit that blew a hole in the | night that Vice-Premier Jan Janship's side below the water line, |kowski of the London government ! rupturing many fuel lines. land 15 other Polish underground . One of the crashing attackers had |eaders would be tried “in the next smashed into the hangar deck and few days" on charges of diversionist| exploded, starting a ‘roaring fife 3Ctidns behind the Red army lines. Water rushed in the gaping Foe. They Were arrested In March. i Whe ship took on a six-degree list. |
‘Deadly Firecracker® A
rr,
Creates Bad Atmosphere spokesman for Stanislaw | A nightmarish spray of “fire-|Mikolajczyk, former premier of the works" followed, Comdr. R. P. Beebe, | London government, and two other Coronado, Cal, told reporters while| London Poles invited to the Moscow | , the ship was being repaired in conference said the announcement Bremerton, was “a most unfavorable developPlanes blazed from their own ment.” + flaming gasoline and machineguns | “1t will. create an extremely bad | . popped like strings of deadly fire-|,tmosphere for the conference,” he | , grackers. | said. “The men were terrific in theilr| The spokesman earlier had Inheroism,” Beebe said. “They daghed | dicated that Mikolajezyk would ask | into the flames, despite the heat for the release of the 16 Poles as a : and exploding ammunition and con- preliminary requirement for suc-
Quered them.” |cessful discussions. After the sixth hit there was a|
lull in the attack.
The Saratoga continued to oper- | ate with the fleet while crew mem- | TIME TABLE bers fought the flames and res-|
cued their comrades.
Forward Flight Deck Wrecked CHANGES Cranes, catapults, and guns were smashed-and wrecked. The forward Effecti Sund i flight deck was battered beyond use. «irective Sunday, Explosions spread the flames. The hangar deck was so filled June 17 with fire that it could not bé& ap- : i proached from the interior of the To Cincinnati ship. An officer and two enlisted men | Earlier Departure— were lowered over the side while i : the “Sara” cruised at 25 knots. They Carolina . Special
fought the’ flames from their pre- Lv. Indianapolis 5:00 P. M. carious perch .until they were
brought under control. =~ ° Carries through sleeping cars But an hour and a half after the to Knoxville, Charleston and first attack, the Saratoga had to intermediate points via Soutake more punishment. More Jap- thern Railway from Cinanese planes appeared in the deep- cinnatl. ening dusk and another "bomb
trashed into her. RgEL side { : . : —— EH 4 SAR Heads for Friendly Base Tater Départures—
hepa Tmnstug Se “Train No. 438 mess, 100 er- planes aboard and Indi 7:50 . headed for a friendly base. There Lv. Indianapolis A she made the temporary repairs
required - before she could go to Bremerton for permanent repairs. | At the navy yard, the hull su- To CHICAGO
int said: perintendent said Later Departur
3 “The Saratoga was the most extensively damaged vessel the Puget . Sound navy yard has ever received. James Whitcomb Riley She had more varied types of dam- Lv. Indianapolis 9:25 A.M.
age all at once than any ship we've
seen since Pear! Harbor.” i i i The Sara had been hit before but White City Special : not from the air. She was struck Ly. Intianaysiis 1:39 2. M. % by a torpedo from an enemy submarine shortly after Pearl Harbor Chicago Night Express ) as she operated between the Ha- Lv. Indianapolis 12:20 A. M. waiian islands and beleaguered Wake. . ) Rejoining the fleet after “the battle of Midway, the Sara went
Wi, | unscathed until the battle of the arge $2.00 Steward islands. Then she took an- ; othér torpedo and..was again laid KEW YORK or- up-—for the last time until this ~ We $5.98 February
Off g Joined the British CENTRAL $3 08 In the spring of 1944, the Sara AAS .
<
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