Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 18 June 1945 — Page 7

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13,1945 J | MONDAY,

WAGE H- HIKE

of WLB nversion. HERROLD

‘orrespondent

lune 18.—~The i

a

the minimum an the present an aid to ull it and pros-

and hour diy that it ancommendation iy of problems ninistering an standards act. | the 40-cents Ir week.

nended

| probably be labor board las itement on reWLB sources eing considered ublic members’ dent Roosevelt,

WLB suggested e raised—it did -and that conpeg points Jor e the minimum tablishment of structures. 1 would hardly minimum wage

' LADIES AUXILIARY | WILL GIVE DINNER

ongress of Ine The ladies auxiliary of Fraternal 1s and Ameri- Order of Eagles, 211, will hold a Labor, it was ¥ povered dish dinner at 6:30 p. m. Tuesday inthe Pagle rel= 43 W.1 to 50c Vermont Fd a mists favor a The regular meeting will be held hour or at the at 8 p. m, with Mrs. Florence

ninimum which 'oves or orders ving substandy would rather 50-cent mininissive” 65-cent by Senator Fla.). ur law passed

Bramlett presiding. In charge of the dinner are Mrs. Fay Paul and Mrs. Marie Biggs.

. Frank N. Wallace, state entomoloBist, will speak at the luncheon of the Gyro club, tomorrow jn the Indianapolis Athletic club.

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JUNE_18, 1045 ; ERE Army Prisoners at Ft. Harrison Are Taught Trades,

Repairing army clothing at Ft. Harrison are these U. S. soldierMay “graduate” back to combat service.

dier would have remained in the barracks for the duration of the War, charged,

atrists try to find which kind of | training will get him going right again. He is taught military courses by overseas veterans. something about trade.

{pair shoes, fixing 500 to 600 a day. | Quantities of army clothing are re- | paired in a shop where sewing and button machines hum as clothing factory, Nine former sta- { bles have been converted to garages | where 65 civilians teach prisoners how | will | heavy crates for overseas shipping.

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Col. Peyton Winlock talking to shop.

Scores of To Service

The disciplinary barracks at Ft.

Inmates Return

Real Tha

dB li tint A

ik hh

prisoner at work in clothing repair

» »

After Training

Despite all this work, the prison-

Harrison will “graduate” its 150th|ers still have time for relaxation convicted soldier by the first of jand entertainment. July.

The barracks

has a 68-piece band. All instru-

This is a little-known side to the [ments have been donated. There is

The barracks, where the army

sends soldiers found guilty of various offenses, has figured in the news tennis, checkers, weight-lifting and recently. A riot there cost the life! of a guard and a city fireman. Sev-| eral buildings were burned to the! ground.

The Chamber of Commerce urged

There had |

Taught a Trade But there is another side to the

| barracks, the training of these sol(dier misfits, making them valuable to the army during the war and| teaching them an occupation sol they can make good as civilians.

In former days, a convicted sol-|

then be dishonorably dis-

Now psychologists and psychi-

He can learn

Learn fo Repair Cars About 60 men are learning to re-

in a

to repair autos. A box factory be started next month making

easier .’. . Vanishes quicker

{Emma Beck, both

army jail recently established ata library containing 17,000 books. the fort.

Records show a weekly circulation of about 800 volumes. A recreation room provides table

other games and sports. There is a baseball team and other athletic activities. The chief objective of the disciplinary barracks at the fort, officers

A “graduate” is re-

self but society also.

SERVICES ARE HELD

FOR MRS. GWARTNEY ~ Early-today police raided an es-

Christian lence servi ,| tablishment at 319 W. Vermont st., held this ORG SOF a omer | arresting Edith ‘Grissen, the proM. Gwartney, 228 E. 13th sk | prietress, and 13 alleged dice shoot riers. Ten pairs of dice were confiscated.

former school teacher who dies Saturday in Huff's sanitarium. Burial was to be in Pleasant Hill cemetery, Daviess county. Mrs. Gwartney, who was 178, taught school in Daviess county before coming to Indianapolis in 1914. She was a charter member of the American Legion auxiliary in Irvington and was the widow of Emmett Gwartney. . Her survivors are a daughter, Mrs. Helen Munger, Indianapolis; two sons, Hilbert J. and Barsh E., both of Los Angeles, Cal.; two sisters, Mrs. Minnie Thomas and Mrs. f Indianapolis, dren.

and eight grandch

human nutrition,

we

that the barracks be removed, but |€Xplain, is to rehabilitate and re- | withdrew its objections when in- | Instate soldiers who have broken | {formed that the barracks nearest army law. {Billings hospital would be removed. |88rded, therefore, as an accomplish- | About 800 of the 2800 prisoners are | ment which benefits not only him{confined in that area. been complaints they were annoying hospital attaches.

|

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

*

|CHIEF DENIES Edda Tried fo Use Diary

as it's painted, Police Chief Jesse| McMurtry declared today.

assaults continued records, the chief denied .that Indianapolis is in the grip of a “crime wave,” He said:

criminal termed reports of a bold ‘slugging epidemic “exaggerated.”

launched following an assault-mur-der June 2, has snared some 300 persons, most of them on drunk and vagrancy charges. The chief said his objective in ordering the.wholesale arrest of tavern loiterers clear the streets of “crime bail.’

drunks” as his No. 1 problem. Intoxicated soldiers, he said, are especially vulnerable.

‘upsurge in tire thefts. said, probably contribute extensively to & suspected wide-scale Midwest tire black market.

| |

|of professional safe cracking jobs jon their hands today. Two safes, | both rifled, were found by deputies {on the High School rd. north of Rd. 34. carted from Max Patton's tavern, 213 N. Illinois st., last night. It had contained $184.

|

|

® covered is still a.mystery. _ | are searching for the victim as well Ny as the victimizers. | $3200 loot, but apparently didn’t | lose their heads when police pumped bullets at them at the busy intersection of Belmont and Washington sts. late Saturday. gunmen was hit, police said, but both escaped.

assaults, [flurry of robberies were reported | over the week-end.

{a cab driver struck her®and at- | tempted to attack her at 3:3 0a. m, § usJmarning at 28th and Manlove {the bus station.

|the victim of an attempted assault lin her home on Detroit st. After {shrieking for help, she lapsed into | unconsciousness and was found on the bedroom floor | marks on her neck.

{same house, also a woman, fled by | climbing-out onto the porch roof {and leaping to the roof of an ad- | joining home.

bandits stuck up Kroger grocery stores at 3839 E. Washington st, and at 2030 W. Washington st, galloped from the latter store, Sgt. William Ennis and Patrolman James Dunn blasted away. dropped their money bag in the fast shuffle. taken in the holdups.

Pershing ave, was attacked by a “heavy-set” assailant near Senate ave, and Washington st.

Market and West sts. was held up by an armed thug who then was unable to start lifted an automatic rifle from the front seat of the car, and fled on foot. been stolen ‘from Noblesville.

was stabbed at 19th and Yandes st.

and an unidentified woman was slashed in the 700 block of Indiana

WAVE OF CRIME

| |

But Thefts and Assaults

Continue Mounting.

Crime in the city isn't as black |

Although reports of thefts wnd+ to jam police

“I don't think there's as much activity as usual.” He

Careless Drunks -

A city-wide police crackdown,

was to

Chief McMurtry named “careless

Chief McMurtry did note an

These, he

Many tire thefts, two criminal several sluggings and a

Tells of Attack A 23-year-old woman told police

Shey had entered the cab at

Another woman, 40-years-old, was

with choke-

A second-floor occupant of the

Safes Carried Off Hoosier police also had a couple

One of them had been

Identity of the second safe rePolice

A couple of gloved bandits lost

One of the

Loot Recovered Prior to the shooting melee, the

As they

The thieves It contained $3200

Alonzo Dellinger, 45, of 1242 S.

Filling Station Held Up The Gaseteria filling station at

“his”

automobile,

Police learned the auto had

Albert Henderson, 1107 E. 17th st.

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To Save Husband's Life

(Continued From Page One)

had been threatened by the NeoFascists. : She readily admitted her identity—Edda Ciano—thé most noted woman of modern Italian history. On hearing her identity the gay Tessin lads goggled because the famous -countess,-old and disheveled as she appeared, obviously was, pregriant. J Edda Ciano was.not prégnant. Strapped under her dress were five commonplace notebooks— the Ciano Diary—once held in the right drawer of the magnificent desk of the foreign minister of Rome's Chigi palace.

#8 » = ON DEC. 20, 20 days before Ciano’s execution, Edda got wind of German interest in the Ciano papers. She was staying in a clinic at Ramiola, near Parma, un her father’s orders, Mussolini dlso advised his favorite daughter, Edda, to keep quiet if she did not want to get into serious trouble with the gestapo. Nevertheless, Edda was stantly driving between the Verona prison, where her husband was spending ‘the last days of his life, and the luxurious villa on the Lago di Garda whence Mussolini

“governed” Neo-Fascist Italy.

Using threats and scenes, Edda tried to induce her fathér to liberate her husband. Through Ciano's female guardian came word that the Nazis wanted the Ciano papers and that Ciano's trial, first scheduled for Dec. 27, was to be postponed until Jan. -7-to give time for “an understanding about.the papers.”

u » ” IN BERLIN, Gestapo ' Chief Heinrich Himmler was at his usual game. He was impressing Hitler and Foreign Minister Joachim von Ribbentrop that, if spared, Ciano could one day serve as a peace intermediary with the allies and that his precious papers must at all costs be obtained. Edda awaited the Nazis’ proposals. which arrived Jan. 3 with two letters from Ciano, One was transmitted officially. The other was smuggled and kept secret. The first letter told Edda that “the Germans were going to play fair,” and asked her to go ‘hoine, get the papers and return with them. Edda was officially informed that, at 8 p. m. on Jan. 7, Ciano would meet her 10 miles outside of Verona and would be allowed to take refuge in Switzerland, in exchange for the papers. un o 8 CIANO’S SECOND letter was more explicit. It said that the Germans had overlooked the exact temperance and volume of papers hidden in Italy and that in no case were the diary and a dossier marked “Germany” to be delivered to them. Edda . knew that the “Germany” file contained complete detailed reports of Ciano’s discussions with the Nazi leaders from Munich until the end of Ciano’s official career in April, 1943. Edda was too sick to do the job herself, so a friend, Marquis Emilio Pucci, replaced her, He divided the papers into two parcels and hid the “Germany” dossier and diary under his roomy

Office Hours: 24 Hours a'Day

Your doctor, who i8 the first to detect a need for rest in others, has driven himself without mercy in wartime. He serves his own patients as well as those of absent physicians, yet finds time to keep abreast of medicine's many wartime discoveries. Most people were quick to appreciwd ’s sacrifices and looked for ways to encourage him. They attended his First Aid classes and Jraryed to call him only wien absoutely necessary. They volunteered to assist overtaxed nurses in crowded hospitals . . . and turned his dream of

d

weiser

ate the

Bu

con-

aviator's coat. Less

documents were conspicuously

fis

| |

important |

placed on the front seat of his |

automobile. Through snowstorms, tempests and over Italy's worst side roads Pucci hurried back to Parma with "his precious load, arriving just‘in time to take Edda ‘to the Verona rendezvous witli hét husband: » »

"FOR TWO hours

= | Edda waited, but in vain. In Verona the next |

day she was told that the Nazis |

had changed their minds. Der fuehrer had telegraphed officials of Verona prison not to bother any more with the Ciano papers and that justice must be done. The telegram added that the gestapo general in charge at Verona was responsible for Edda Ciano and that he must prevent her escaping into Switzerland. Thus von Ribbentrop won his fight with Himmler.. Von - Rib bentrop always hated Ciano as a rival in politics—perhaps in love, too. Ciano was too close a witness of many of von Ribbentrop’s political deeds. So Edda concentrated on saving what Ciano considered as his political testament, his last letter written froth Verona as a preface to his diary and the diary itself. She refurned to the Ramiola clinic. At night, aided by Pucci, she buried what papers she could not possibly take with her, including the copious ddssier marked “Ger-

many.” On January 8, II Duce’s { beloved daughter left her father’s

country with bitter hatred for the

Germans, whose duplicity she fin. | ally realized, and with. no less | bitter contempt for her father’s |

weakness. ” » o WHILE PREPARING

was doomed. He asked two last services of his wife—a phial of poison to kill himself and the forwarding of two letters—one to Prime Minister Churchill, and the other to King Victor Emanuel. His requests were carried out. Just before crossing the border, Edda made a last desperate attempt to save her husband. She wrote to der fuehrer and Mussolini that she had the diary and that if Ciano were murdered, it would be published with all the dramatic consequences it would entail for the Nazis and Fascists. She threatened that she herself would add her own vast knowledge. After leaving Edda at the Swiss border, Pucci returned to Italy with the letters to der fuehrer and Il Duce. He was thereupon arrested and tortured in the illfamed San Vitore prison of Milan but refused to reveal where the rest of the Ciano papers were hidden. . The.. doctor at the Ramiola clinic, however, under torture, revealed the secret and the gestapo seized the papers Edda had to leave behind her. What has become of the documents nobody. knows and Edda less than anyone. Seemingly the diary is all that is left of Ciano’s secret.

Copyright, 1945, hy The Indianapolis Times and The Chicago Daily News, Inc. All rights reserved for all countries, including right of translation.

+ TRADE MARK REG. U.§. PAY. OFF,

to de- | part, her husband's last message . reached her. Ciano knew that he |

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Today the word, “cooperation”, has a fuller meaning in America. The threat to our freedom has rekindled an intense national spirit . . . revealed amazing capacities on the part of our people to help themselves and their fellow countrymen until victory is complete. They are strehgthened for the road ahead. They should go far, - indeed, in aiding our gallant younger generation get the reward it has earned and will go on earning—progress in a world at peace.

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