Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 16 June 1945 — Page 2

Staff of the Scripps-Howard Newspapers |

a iu (Continued From Page One)

straight into Japan, leaving Chi- | - nese to hold Jap armies on mainland? Japs get jitters thinking “about that question. . - n .

_ Army Death Rate ARMY MEDICAL corps is in a stew about wide variance of death rates from battle causes in medicdl installations, that is, men who die in hospitals from battle wounds. Army medics in Europe had percentage down to all-time low ~about 2 per cent. Death rate in Pacific much higher—two or three " times greater,

tenants: has warned _ the President against signing order. Chairman Eccles. of federal reserve still favors a special capital gains tax to curb speculative real estate sales, and is said to have suggésted cutting the rate to 50 per cent on city property sales, as against the 90 per cent proposed originally.

n » o With post-war commercial aviation battle just ahead many companies are preparing to make

high offers to top men in air |

transport commund. An official of one big company recommended that the firm hire" the entire top

| TOUR BY PLANE

Leaves Next Week on Trip To West Coast.

(Continued From Page One)

Press Secretary Charles G. Ross, |left' observers gasping. It rivaled anything the late President Roose velt ever attempted when he was a champion world traveler. The itinerary was tentative because a lot depends on whether the San Francisco conference finishes its work as hoped by the end of next week. ; Will Greet Gen, Ike The possibility that it would not ldo so developed : last night when Russia unexpectedly rejected a {committee decision to give the pro{posed assembly broader power to | discuss international affairs. Mr. Truman is to remain here in

TION

“THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES Local Men Fly to Okinawa

© NATS TAG TC

the

~!who are its potential leaders and

Seek Clues to Underground And Tieup With Japs.

’ (Continued From Page One)

terror weapons, as for. instance the trans-Atlantic Virdckets? 3. ‘How strong and closely knit is the Nazi underground in Germany,

where is it based? i 4. Do secret Nazi outposts exist in neutral or other countries? Place Kept Secret Whereabouts of the "questioning was not revealed, Ribbentrop was flown to “supreme headquarters” from Lueneberg. yesterday after he was captured in a Hamburg boarding house, : However, authorities refused to say whether the headquarters were those in Parfs or Frankfurt-on-Main,

southwest coast of Okinawa anf] Unten harbor, farther north, even longer, Tokyo said. American ai; strength in the Oki-

ing 400 on new land bases and the remainder on carriers.

kyo said, that American bases on Okinawa were being “steadily per-

fenses were growing with “amasging speed” on southern Kyushu, closest

Tokyo said.

(Continued From Page One)

It estimated rapidly growing

nawa area at 1000 planes, include Everything seems to indicate, To-

fected for full-dress operations.” Another Tdkyo broadcast said de-

part of Japan proper to Okinawa. “Two and three-way defenses” have been built at all possible places,

Mass Slaughter Field reports said disorganized hanzai charges on Okinawa already had begun, Marines of the lst division on the western flank killed 29 of 50 attacking Japanese in one

_— — — SATURDAY, JUNE 16, 1045 - ALLIES GRILLING Tokyo Says Yanks Prepare VON RIBBENTROP| ~~ For New Island Invasion

officers believed there were thous

sands of additional « ad and dying behind the enemy lines. American artillery dug in on the Yaéju-Dake plateau for the last time. The guns now cover the entire remaining Japanese-held . area at the southern tip of the island, : Nearly half the Yaeju-Dake pla= teau already had been occupied by the Americans, ; : Maj. Gien, James L. Bradley's 96th division swarmed down on the plateau from the north fh a drive threatening to split the enemy pocket in half. The 96th was using its heavy tanks and flame-throwers on the plateau for the first time. Burn Japs in Holes On the east, the Tth division widened its hold on the plateau to nearly a mile and reached hill 115, probably the last enemy-held height. Men of the 32d regiment snaked 500-foot hoses from flame-throwing

"Two Indiana

woundéd in the have been ive prison camps. Cy Wot Pvt. Millard 1 11, Box 260, on Lt. Harold Ja Prospect st., in |

LIBE T. Sgt. Jesse Central ave, in 8. Sgt. Jame Wright st., from

SAFE— . Captured Apri bomber was shot T. Sgt. Jesse W of Mrs. Mafy G. tral ave. was I Germany. Sgt. Roberts w sion when he wa freed while he 1 to Munich. He dential - citation

ATC personnel. | RE # a 4 An Okinawa air terminal poster at Yontan airfield served as a leaning post for Aviation Radioman 1.¢ James MeClure (left) and Photographer's Mate 1-c Jolin Strack, both of Indianapolis, The two

Hoosiers flew to Okinawa recently on a navy evacuation plane,

A 1400-MILE flight by an air evacuation -plane to Okinawa's

Washington for triumphal | a home-coming from Europe Monday Plane Research lof Gen.:Dwight D. Eisenhower, The AIRCRAFT MANUFACTURERS | President will hold a formal dinner will compaign for congress for the supreme commander at the

to | write into law our peacetime pol- |white House Monday night. jcy for airplane research and de-

Congress may ask questions. Apparent explanation is that in Pacific medics do not work so close to battle lines as medics did in Europe. Speed in handling cases is greatest factor in men's

charge and 30 in another. Even larger numbers were killed by the 7th division on the eastern flank, The number of prisoners was increasing steadily, but most of the enemy were being killed at a

heart, Released from V. .dnesday, Sgt. day furlough, H Mae Roberts of

The London News - Chronicle quoted the unreliable Brussels radio saying -4hat Rippentrop was taken to Frankfurt, A dispatch from British 2d army headquarters said Ribbentrop men-

tanks around the crags and cavp2s of the hill to burn the Japanese from their holes, or The 32d regiment also seized au= most all of Nakaza town, four miles {rom the southern tip of the island,

Photographer Strack, attached

On either Tuesday or Wednesday to the NATS Pacific wing publie

recovery. Closer to battle lines men can be aided, the better their chances of living, Medical corps is greatly concerned about this, probably will improve Pacific |

velopment before V-J day. Manus facturers interpret war mobilization and reconversion act to mean that armed forces must cancel

(Mr. Truman planned to start by | plane for Olympia, Wash, where he {will be the guest of Gov. Mon C, | Wallgren, his former colleague in

Yontan airfield recently brought together two Indianapolis resis dents new serving with the Pacific wing of the naval air transport service.

relations unit, flew to Okinawa 15 days after the island was ine

vaded.

tioned that he was on a “mission for Hitler” during preliminary questioning. Censors at British headquarters first said they would not permit

rate of nearly 1000 a day. E: G. Valens, United Press war correspondent, at the front, said the battles had become a virtual slaughter, :

First division marines ‘on the west coast sent fanks around the nose of Kunishi ridge and blasted enemy positions on the reverse slopes. The 6th marine ‘and 77th army

# S. Sgt. James of Mrs. Elizabe

+ Wright st, was

from Stalag 10:

, tured Dec. 23,

He took pictures of the work of NATS air evacuation squadron 1

technique. war contract after V.J day. the senate. : d # x “If we start from scratch after | Will Visit Conference They are John Strack, pho- mention of the mission to be cabled) «gy; troops can't kill all the Jap- [divisions still were mopping up of the bulge.

War crimes commission intends to try top criminals first, prob- | ably in order of their importance. It hopes to clear up list of chief offenders by end of this year. » s »

Future War Industry LOOKING TOWARD better preparedness that U, S. had at start of world war II, a new board of army, navy men and civilians have started work on army-navy training for industrial mobilization. Members include Joseph E. Powell, Bethlehem Steel; Orman Hunt, General Motors; John Hancock, who helped write BaruchHancock reports; Brig. Gens. Armstrong, Hepkins, Hopkins, Minton and navy Capt. Strauss and Vice Adm, Farber, At the start of this war U. 8. bad famed M-day plan, result of years of study, That plan was ig- . mored. The administration improvised with succession of agen-cies—-NDAC, SPAR, OPM and finally WPB. Result was it took us a long time to hit our stride, One reason for long line of failures was that powers of the agencies were not written into law. It is hoped when new board finishes its job, congress will implemeht pew industrial mobiliza- ‘ tion program with legislation so in case of another war production agency will know its responsibility, have adequate powers.

® 8» HOUSE POST-WAR policy committee hears Gen. Marshall, Adm. King and Gen, Vandergrift (marines) today in final session on post-war universal training. Next week committee will vote te recommend it. This committee won't recommend any specific bill. That job will .be left to house military affairs committee.

Home Evictions

that in building research pro-

AFTER PRICE CONTROL act | extension is through congress, | you can look for an OPA order | requiring six months’ notice be- | : fore a tenant can be evicted from | # home in a rent-controlled area. Present rule requires 90-day .notice, but OPA Administrator | Bowles says it hasn't reduced sales of homes in crowded areas. Evictions have reached “alarming” rate, he adds, complicating OPA rent control problems.

# = x PRESIDENT TRUMAN is hold- | ing off the office of economic stabilization on its proposal to require 35 per cent down payments on purchases of city property,

OES wants executive order as in-

time to study it. One of his trusted senate lieu-

gram and getting appropriations |

they fear U, 8, will fall behind in world race on development of

| rockets and jet-propelled planes,

» 2 »n IF AND WHEN Becretary Stettinius is replaced by James F.

| Byrnes, as has been predicted,

the “Stettinjus team” is due to dissolve." : Likely to go if Stettinius goes: Archibald MacLeish, who heads department's information- serve ices; Nelson Rockefeller, who directs Latin-Amercian affaris. Likely to stay: Dean Acheson, department’s congressional liaison man; Will Clayton, assistant in charge of foreign economic af-

, fairs,

» LJ » Job-Back Confusion - = DEFECTS. OF PRESENT system of placing veterans in eiviljan life is becoming plain’ as army releases grow into thousands. One main cause is un usual Washington complaint— authority and functions tered. : In this case among four agencles—U. S. employment service, selective service administration, veterans administration and war manpower commission, Most trouble is expected to center around section 8 of selective service law which guarantees old jobs back to veterans who had permanent employment when they entered armed forces. Draft Director Hershey's strict interpretation of this section has

never been accepted by either

C.I1. O.or A. F. of L. Labor bodies have declined to go to court for a ruling, and congress has shied from clarifying it. * n n President Truman's policy of appointing so many Missourians to big jobs has resulted in this wisecrack: The President makes appointments from the east and from the west. The eastern ones are from St. Louis, the western ones from Kansas City. ¥ » » THE SUPREME COURT, its adjournment already delayed by disagreements, probably will quit

{ Monday for the summer leaving

a half dozen or more cases unde-

| cided. Final day decisions are

expected to include Harry Bridges

deportation and Associated Press | { anti-trust cases.

» » ” THERE'S PLENTY of friction among hranches of national hous-

| ing agency but it wasn't the cause | of Abner H. Ferguson's resigna- | tion yesterday as commissioner of | | federal | his friends say. flation curb; Truman wants more |

housing administration, They explain he's been trying to quit to re-enter law "practice. He has been in

| FHA 11 years.

scat- |

“3

He was scheduled to fly from | Olympia to San Francisco next Fri- | day for an afternoon reception to | be attended by the delegates of the | 50 nations participating in the in- | ternational security conference, A {small state dinner for the Presi{dent was being planned by Secre- | |tary of State Edward R. Stettinius {Jr. for Friday night. | On Saturday the President was | |to attend a reception given by | { Mayor Roger Lapham's United Na- | |tions conference committee of San | | 3 | Francisco citizens. In the afternoon the President | was to attend the closing session | of the conference and address the | {conference between 7 and 7:30 !p. m., Indianapolis time. | Then Comes Berlin \ If the conference ended on] |schedule Mr. ‘Truman was to fly| {pack to Washington on Sunday,

| June 24, and be at the White House |

| June 25 and 26. He has an appoint- | 0), crowding the rails to take jn bon whisky production for awhile. ’ | The war food administration's Red Cross girls ply them with all | third quarter dairy allocations gave

the coffee, milk, lemonade, ice Civilians 7,000,000 pounds more but-|peadquarters said an attractive 35« ter than the 320,000,000 pounds con-| year.old brunette

| ment with Governor Thomas E.| {Dewey of New York on June 25. i He is to leave Washington June {27 for a home-coming celebration |being planned for him by citizens {of his home town, Independence, {Mo., for that afternoon and eveining, One June 28 he is to attend fa similar celebration in Kansas City {about 10 miles away. :

After that, according to Ross, Mr. | {Truman “may or may not go”: to|

| the governor's conference at Mack{inac Island during the first week in {July. If he does he may return

tographer’s mate 1-¢, husband of Mrs. Mary Lee Strack, 3226 Central ave. and gon of Mr, and Mrs. John A. Strack, 1232 'W, 30th st, and James McClure, aviation radioman 1-¢, son of Mr. and Mrs. David W. McClure, 1718 Central ave.

in transporting wounded men

abroad, but later. relented.

from the target area to medical

facilities of rear-base hospitals.

Radioman McClure, the Jimmy MeClure Table Tennis Co, was a crew member of the plane which flew from the Mari-

anas to Qkinawa.

owner of

Had Letters In Possession It was first believed the so-called mission had some connection with [letters addressed to “Vincent | Churehill”—obviously Prime Minis[ter Winston Churchill--and British Marshal 8ir Bernard L. Montgom-

Parade to Pacific ANOTHER DAB OF BUTTER DU

Is On in Earnest (Continued From Page One) ity and speedy travel.

As the once ghost-like grey ships| of the convoy steam into New York

| barkation program-—service, snide

colorful signal flags from stem to tern, : Their whistles blow, A “Welcome

Home” ship puts out to meet them, day t {Usually a WAQ band from Ft, Somew

Slight Increase in Sight—

bo pay, they are decked out with| But No More Bourbon, ten of the text of the letters.

WASHINGTON, June 16 (U. Pp), bontrop would be able to shed much still too much of a labor shortage | Civilians could look forward to-|light on the mystery of whether | here to warrant it, judging from o slightly more butter—but| Hitler was dead or alive. He spoke hat less cheese—in the next|of Hitler as “dead” but admitted city’s 100 largest “essential” inAnd no more hour- the fuehrer still was alive when dustries,

Hamilton, Brooklyn, serenades the | three months.

all their homeland’they ean see. |

cream, doughnuts, sandwiches and candy they can eat. Flags of the United Nations and special banners form a backdrop. Throughout all this activity special telegraphic forms and postcards have been collected from the men aboard so families, best girls and friends will know the good news quickly. A 'He-Man's Meal

{briefly to Washington for a quick look at business on his desk. Then comes Berlin.

FRENCHMEN ATTACK NAZIS' SPANIARDS

| : (Continued From Page One)

‘smashed windows and ripped off {doors to get at the Spaniards I inside. Equipment and personal belong{ings begin taken home by the Spaniards were tossed out on the {station platform, where a crowd [pounced upon them.

| The. battle raged an hour before |

{railroad officials could get the train moving again. Finally the train |started off in the direction of | Aix-Les-Bains, { Members of the resistance move{ment had blown up a* section of

another line from this town tol

There is no red tape to cut get{ting the men out of the staging | areas and on their way home. And | regardless of the time the men put in they are fed a “He-Man's” meal, Tighten those belts civilians, and don't drool. They get steak, French {fried potatoes, appetizers, soup

cream, milk, tea and coffee, and there is no ban on seconds or thirds. .The first helping usually comes to about three pounds of food. The isecond is said to be larger. | But as important as food to these | men is the desire to hear the voice of someone they love, On the Second Lap The telephone company at Camp | Kilmer estimates that for every 100 soldiers arriving about 85 long distance calls will be made. In recent | weeks, with the arrival of returnees |in large humbers, the calls placed {have risen to a high level. Tuesday and Wednesday more

Grenoble, where several thousand {Frenchmen were awaiting the

{Spaniards with the declared in-

{tention of lynching them, The Blue division was officially { dissolved by Generalisimo Francisco Franco over a year ago. But mem-

bers who wanted to remain on the °VeT- They are on the second lap.

eastern front as volunteers in the Wehrmacht were allowed to do so.

Hunger, Human Needs Driving Europe Toward Socialism

(Continued From .Page One)

After the German collapse, the Spanish consul at

patriation by way of France.

| papers to troops of the division en-|

than 5000 calls were made each day. {It compares with the number made | daily out of South Bend.

E

ery, which Ribbentrop had in his possession when arrested, He had asked his captors to see ‘| that both letters were delivered to Montgomery, but they were sent instead to supreme headquarters with Ribbentrop. Previous reports | that he had a third letter addressed to British Foreign Secretary Anthony Eden were not confirmed. There has been no official indica-

. {who managed to escape.”

ahese they find exposed,’ he sald. “In at least two Instances, our flame-throwing tanks roared across the rock-strewn plateau close on the . tail of groups of Japanese numbering from 100 to 250. “They killed Japanese by the dozens, rolling over their bodies to ‘put salt on the tails’ of any

In addition to the Japanese bodies already recovered, American

CHECK REPORTS ON CITY'S MANPOWER

(Continued From Page One)

| Allied observers doubted that Rib-

|last he saw him in Berlin, Divorcee With him

Latest reports from British

divorcee was

sumed during April, May and June. | found with Ribbentrop in a fours

The cheese quota of 92,000,000 pounds will be 20,000,000, pounds os 5 Hamburg house, where he was |

| room apartment on the fifth floor

shorter than during the current| captured. British officers said she three-month period.

Meantime, WFA“scotched hopes and nad rented a room to Ribben-

for any bourbon production during the July liquor-making “holiday.” Corn, WFA said, is needed for

more essential purposes. of both beverage and

alcohol were prohibited from buying jamas. or using corn except for stocks they

livestock feed and war - essential { processing needs.

These men are glad to get home, their stay is brief, family reunions short-lived. 7 | They know the war is but half

Local Man Coming

Munich gave With Eisenhower

Distillers) British searching party, Ribbentrop |

| apparently owned the apartment

| trop.

he was nude, when captured by a

industrial | was wearing pink and white pa-

He was asleep. “What's the matter?”

All corn available is needed to fill “what's the matter?”

{ fresh vegetables, bread and butter. | {salad, cake or pie {or both), ice] J

Ribbentrop readily admitted his identity and said he had come from “up north.” .He said his family was lin southern Germany and he was | most worried about them. A son was found in a 3d army prison camp

STR E IN HI only last week. Inside one of Ribbentrop’s pock-

(Continued From Page One)

{ets searchers found several hun{dred thousand marks in‘ 100-mark

satisfaction with a war labor board notes. wage order.

| The divorcee was arrested with

William Crawford, general coun- Ribbentrop.

The others were members of the International Brotherhood of Team-

No Violence

{sters (A. F. of L.).

|

Leaders of the A. F. of L. union urged their men to return to work. | Although strikers milled about the | {garages and terminals, there was no| | violence during the first hours of

the strike

Lt The strike was the second within | . Col. Ernest R. Lee, son of Mrs. a month in the drivers’ dispute with abling them to enter Switzerland. |C: R. Lee, Marott hotel’ an ald 10 {he WLB over their demands for a The Swiss arranged for their re- Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower, will| wage increase and a. shorter work|

{accompany the general to Washing- | week

ton Monday,

sel of the Cartage Exchange of Chicago, said all the big companies were affected by the drivers’ refusal to man the trucks. About 5000 drivers stayed on the | job. The police fabor detail said about 6000 of the strikers belonged to the! independent Chicago truck drivers'| union.

Aussie Brides | To Ask Divorces

(Continued From Page One)

reading: “I am through with that girl, don't give her a visa,” The next day his telegram would say: “Disregard yesterday's wire, I love_her dearly. Please hurry up the visa,” : aw Ww TRANSPORTATION {br Amer-ica-bound wives in a serious problem due to war needs. Our army and navy have managed so far to send across only a | small percentage of the estimated 9000 wives of U. 8. servicemen in Australia and New Zealand. And since wives come first, thére has been no passage at all —nor visas—for the 5000 fiancees of American fighting men “down

|

{reports made to the WMC hy the

‘lof C.1. 0. issued a statement through the employer group yesterday say-|

- & ing he favored ending the man-| Mr. Atwood said he favored go- | j ower ing back to the 40-hour week to | people, “stabilizing the purchasing power |

of the area as a necessary step

controls lifted but that there was

The unofficial Citizens Emergency {Manpower committee, composed of employers headed by Howard T.

Griffin, attacked the reliability of

{those reports, It argued that they {are not made often enough to give

{an accurate picture of industry's employment needs in these days of

{sudden contract cutbacks and can-

| cellations. | The committee based its conten-

{tions on figures gathered from “top

enemy remnants on the mudfiats of Naha harbor. The marines alone took 165 prisoners.

Actiton on Borneo Meanwhile, Tokyo reported that a strong allied fleet was nearing the great oil port of Balik Papan, an the east coast of Borneo, indie cating another invasion of the island may be imminent. A Japanese broadcast sald thas the fleet included an aircraft carrier, three battleships, 16 destroyers and other warships. Today's eommunique from Gen, Douglas MacArthur's headquarters reported a heavy bomber attack on Balik Papan gun positions, and nearby airdromes at Manggar and Seppinggan. Australian troops advancing north of Brunei town were within 16 miles of the oil refinery center of Tutong, on the road to the Seria and Mirl oll fields. ; American forces in the Philip= pines began a renewed drive to | clear the remaining Japanese from | Luzon, paced by the 37th division which spurted 22 miles in 24 hours.

——

management” by Myron R. Green, | Contrary to earlier reports that ;,4.ctria] commissioner of the In-|

| dianapolis Chamber of Commerce.

Green are correct. . Labor Statement

Mr,

The deadlock was broken yester- | day hy a compromise which can|celled the Monday meeting. Who |

| group

ithe WMC. The ‘“recounters”

Co.; mond Chain & Manufacturing Co. and Keith H. Hoffman of Allison

the

power controls here,

provide jobs for more

to prevent deflation.”

INDIANAPOLIS CLEARING HOUSE

Clearings Debits

Clearings Debits

Mr. Denning caused no little | stir, therefore, when he announced he cried | PS would invite the 100 firms he 1€dloets his figures from to meet] had contracted for before June 1l./when Lt. V. Adam shook him. | Monday to find out if the fgures) {they gave him or the ones they gave the Chamber of Commerce's |

| proposed the compromise could not | be learned, but both sides agreed | {to have four from the employer | check the figures being given are | A. H. Clarke of Indianapolis Bleaching Co.; Earl Beck of Ell Lilly &| C. C. Winegardner of Dia-|

The labor members of Mr, Den- | FOR THE FAMILY ning’s committee had not agreed | with the management members on dropping the controls now, but] Arnold Atwood, regional director | United Auto Workers, |

‘ve $7,431,000 «$23,453,000

$36,607,000 $108,636,000

[ing on Russia can be traced to Rus-

* Islan influence.

taught to look for orders in all things from their governments.

This Russian influence haggap-

16 POLES TO'FACE

Col, Lee, who will be promoted to his full colonelship today at head‘quarters in Germany, will arrive in | the

V. F. W. CARD PARTY Burns - West - Striebeck Auxilinry|

2009, Veterans of Foreign Wars, willl

under.” . °

and

A TIDY NUMBER

| Copyright, 1045, by The Indianapolis Times

The Chicago Daily News, Ine.

|

My Mommie works— so we went on a

Sunday to have my

&

photograph taken by Tower.

SUNDAY HOURS AT BOTH STUDIOS ARE

| VERY CONVENIENT

NO APPOINTMENT NECESSARY

Studios

57 Monument Circle @ Street Floor Dally and Sunday 9:30 to 6:30 Irvington @ 11 South Ritter Ave. Dally # to 6 o Sunday 1 to 5:30

a

i Anderson;

¢ rine Cpl. i Electrician's Mate ! $ in,

A veteran of France, Sgt. Clo and Mrs, Elwoo

{| awaiting shipme

tended high sche

| entered the arm

Sgt. Cloyd has

© lyn, who is 22 'm

been overseas sir

WOUNDED-

Pvt. Millard H: of Mrs. Letha L of Mr. and Mrs R: R. 11, Box on Luzon May 1. Pvt. Harman Warren Central

: was an employee © Co. before he ent

31, 1944. He | since January a

: Percy Jones h | Creek, Mich.

His brother, /

+ Jack -Harman, i

o A Corsair fight

. James Bitzegaio ¢ Mrs. Gilbert Bit: | st, was wounde i waters around J

He was home

1} 20 to June 3 ar

the west coast. Lt. Bitzegaio a in Hymera and

1 Teachers college 1} pre-Pearl Harbor |! and the Asiatic-] |} three battle ste * awarded the DI ¥ and the purple |

+He has two br

li Bitzegaio, an arn 4 pilot who is not tour, and Ensign ll pilot of a torpe plane in the Pac

| STATE—

NAVY Marine Pvt. Ger yette; Marine Pvt. Marine shears, Tennyson; ( Howard Everett Ca; Berlyn

iting NAVY ! Marine Cpl. Jam and; Marine Cpl. F

| Insign Paul Garris | Marine Pfc. Charles

ARMY DE T. 5th Gr. Wende er; Pfc. Hobert vt. Wayne L. Mille 1. Rogers, Bloomin,

i ilusher, Peru,

ARMY DE 8. Bgt. Walter FP, ack H. Calvin, Lo *. Cook, Evansvil drudge, Bremen; P py. Charleston; P

nce J. Roush, Ti

§ tunyon, Hartford (

AEMY WOU 8. Sgt. Eugene . 8th Gr. Harry ames C Dafforn, foward, Hil)sdale; | afayette; Pvt, Jol urg: Pfc. Robert

lfc. LeRoy L. Wool

ARMY MIS!

Secor Lt. Har ette; Sgt. Howard

ARMY LIBERAT | First Sgt. Prank |

| City R

They have never heard of a bill of | rights. Germans,

peared strongly in: Czechoslovakia; United States tomorrow. He t 30! Foland, Rumania, Hungary, Yugo: WJEATH IF CONVICTED ree been on Gen. Eisenhower's oC OUCH ue the post hall E| WASHINGTON—Some 300000 slavia. In all of these countries thé | | staff since he enlisted in 1940. | Washington and Denny sts. ‘Mrs. acres of broomcom is needed each

thelr | { | redistribution of the land and the | A graduate of Shortridge high pg... ia Spurlin is chairman, | year to supply America with brooms.

Italians and

FHA LOANS nD

‘(Continued From Page One)

neighbors on all sides look upon geizure of private industry by the

father-protector, From this benign power in the capital cities flows all guidance and all help,

" A generation at least will be re-| and Belgian leaders have put the|lpvitation urging him to make the|

be expected to {throughout eastern Europe,

J ) + |school, Col. Lee received his reserve thelr governments as a sort 0%! state has started. Collectivism can tor said the Big Three committee commission as second lieutenant |[ move rapidly Which arrangéd the parley attached [so much importance to Witos' pres-

| hen he was graduated from citizens military training tamp in

|

| In western Europe, the French ence that it has addressed a second | 1934.

quired to educate Europe to a new |brakes on the movement to the left trip if at all possible.

appreciation of human

rights. | Both have plans for their empires. | Meantime, the democracies, espe-|Both seek to avoid Internal strife|“every medical attention,” the com- | {Schloss, 2 W. 64th st, and the

clally the United States, can help while their colonies are tied up in | mentator said.

forward the cause of equality, of |the war or still in the hands of the|

the democratic principle and jus- | other powers,

tice for all by supplying the means |

General misery is not the omly trend thing that is driving the people of| either in France or Belgium. It is |since 1938.

Europe toward state socialism.

Can Be "Taught

foward socialism 1s

[there and can be the cause of vi

They have always before them lent discord.

the picture of the armies.

They know these armies sprang | plainly as the weeks pass since | from people that believe in collectivism. Sweéping changes now be~ing carried out in the states border-

“FUR STORAGE

CLEANING & RESTYLING Phone MA. 5717

BISHOP FURS; Inc. ND nook

KAHN BLDG.

piped in

PERE ANS

hh

| Europe's affairs emerges

final victory. American

dead | trial

supplies and American help must be joined with the British and Russian effort

| Col. Lee, who is 32, moved to Indianapolis from San Antonio,

The message assured Witos of | Tex., when he was 11 years old,

He 1s a cousin of William L.

A Moscow dispatch said: the stage brother of Miss Marion Lee of

[was “all set” for the trial of Jan- | Mexico City. kowski and other arrested Poles. It ——————————————————

of bare existence, principally food.| This does not, mean that the will be Moscow's first public mass 3 importance; MM R

of international

ov ’ < 0- | Agreement With Warsaw

operations.

lasses will be formed at 8 a. m

~~ WILL BE FORMED

Soviet courts have jurisdiction in| victorious red| The role of the United States In| no cage by virtue of an agreement | more | with the Russian-supported Polish Monday for summer school stuprovisional government in Warsaw, |dents, giving the Red army control of enrollment of 2700 pupils has been supply lines and zones of military tabulated by H. L. Harshmgn, assistant superintendent of schools in

A preliminary high school

- I NS — — PT, ALMOST AMAZING RELIEF v

to restore order, rs As the last vestiges of feudalism are wiped out in eastern Europe. the peoples can be taught how to exercise their rights as free men. Evolution’ ' will take them from feudalism to state socialism and finally to the high standards of living and the freedoms. that can be attained under democratic rule.

PLAN CHICKEN SUPPER 4 apolis council 57%, Daughters of America, will sponsor a chicken upper .from 5 to 7 p. m. J2onay ; “8 p.m

MikKolajczyk was expected to ask immediate release of the arrested men as a prerequisite to success of the unity conference. Besides Janowsky, the group includes Gen. Bronislaw Okulickl, former commander of the Polish home army, and several men appointed to the Londoti exile government by ‘Mikolajezyk while he was premier. Mikolajezyk and Stanczky - will meet with leaders of the Polish provisional government from Warsaw and other “leaders from within

Poland in an attempt to Set uw a)

charge of extended school services. Summer high school classes will be conducted in all high schools except Howe, Mr. Harshman sald. Preliminary enrollment - for: elementary summer classes at public school 2, public school 26 and Cris- | pus Attucks . high school reached 375. Instruction in high school. classes is without charge and open to. adults as well as. to pupils of high school age, according to Emmett Al , who is in charge of

No charge will be made to resit pupils for tuition in elemen-

;

+

oS echaan idan Road East Cer

a

a : Mh “National

IR 46

TIS JUST as wise to make arrangements for a final resting place in advance of need as it is to make a will or take out life in-

surance.

Come out TODAY and see why so many families have selected this gracious form of entombment for their loved snes. E

. Martin, Sales Director LL

Indianapolis,

a - Indiana Le of 0 “i 5 ¥’ :

for Improv

, * FOR REPAIRS % FOR ROOFING * FOR INSULATING

+% FOR HEATING. PL

$2500 without executing gage. Monthly payments

Any Branch

EE ereeereer meses serene:

706 £. Third Street : 301 N. : BoE a1

* FOR STORM WINDOWS Home owners may borrow up to

years. The only cost is 5% yearly.

Inquire at Main Office or

ements ee 00

* FOR PAINTING © * FOR REMODELING

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LOANS COMMERCIAL COLLATERAL LIFE MSURANCE PERSONAL REAL ESTATE FHA FARM SUBURBAN

asa fy ——— by £

ANTS

a mort up to 3

Sleteher Stust

NW, CORNER PENNSYLVANIA AND MARKET STS.

12 CITY-WIDE-BRANCHES $501 E. Washington Street

geation departm oday . with th

v Jlayground instr

8 Three of the f] fing pools were dll playgrounds ill “open Mond

n The playgr will be:

EEileen Gaughn, ms, Bethel: Al d 61st; Mrs. fiuriel Garrett, ampbsil and Hora An; Mary Alvey, nhall and Christ izabeth Oarter, “ackson and Le essel and Martha len Negley and reek; Ruth Shime neh; Hazel Wool Arley. 46th and ad Jame Ingalls ( d James Gallant

BY Peterson, Rho reia Mendenhal Clise, Riversid:; Ei i Lenore Bor

Ar Bpado Campbel at achonl } in to be f u_Voelki Cl