Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 20 June 1945 — Page 4

PAGE 4 __ a a ion SMITH GREETED Smiling General, Cheered by Home Town, BY THOUSANDS ~~ Eager to Greet Friends of Boyhood

(Continued From Page One)

many of his relatitves and friends

Line Streets 6 Deep to See here today, thinks everything here | “looks grand.”

Returning Hero. | “Indi lis is no com rison to | (Continued From Page One) | ngianapo Lis 15 1 pa ‘conditions over there in Germany.

plause saluted his ‘shiny black Everything there looked flat, sur-, convertible. rounded by enemies and on every]

No gren, Smith acknow ledged the face was a look of defiance.”

IKe's chief of staff feels he's an | greeting, nodding his head, smiling expert at signing things now. He |

and waving amiably. Most of the wag the only American general to

time he stood up in the rear seat. Gon the German surrender terms at | Many citizens appeared thrilled Reims. France. May 7 |

by the sight of Gen. Eisenhower's «yi very easy to sign.” he sald. | chief of staf. Some men spec- «ne chaps that make it possible tators removed their hats, to sign, are the ones who do the |

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

.\mén, drowned after their automo-

{were recovered from swollen. Salt

| automobile was found in the muddy

On Pennsylvania st. near Wash- . . wore ington st, a middle-aged woman Germany has a very definite

|cials theorized the men tried to her sprawling to the pavement.

WEDNESDAY, JUNE 20,.1945

FIND BODIES OF Big Crowd: Watches Attack, BOY ON BICYCLE “TWO.IN CREEK But Fails to He > Vicitms KILLED IN CRAS

" (Continued From Page One) | the Rockville road, he was stru ‘ lby a car driven by Edward Sneat

Local Men Swept From [OV 2 £8) Sr

Road by Flood Waters. ; «| The automobile continued we ; oo {about .150 yards after the eollisi

and thenepulled into a drivewa Mr. Sneath said he felt as thoug bile was swept from a ‘Brown i he had hit something. Bes county road by week-end - floods, 3 $ | When the car stopped, the bicyc | was draped on the front buniper. The youth, who died in City ho | pital an hour later, received hes Haverly, 50, and his stepson, Rich- | injuries and broken legs. © ~~ ard Huff, 21, were recovered four i ? : Last - night's = death _ brought tl miles downstream from where their && oo Mi. | 1945 traffic fatalities An Marid car was. found Moidav. . ] . county to 48. A search was instituted after the Held Marksman Medal

| - ert Stiegelmeyer, who answered a Born in St. Louis, Mo, the | call to the intersection, told the ‘had spent most of his life in Ir

The bodies of two Indianapolis

creek near Nashville yesterday. | The men, Horace Austin (Red)

Ray George ~ Mrs. George

(Continued From Page One) creek, submerged to the top. Offi-

‘WEDNE

IAPS |

OKIN

455 Tro Others L

(Continued

cities more the pre-dawn fire Strong wind visible 75 mil Hundreds of

“shadow” fact ‘of larger of -

stroyed. Tokyo S More than 3 ‘were dropped bringing to at

Georges they would have to swear'

weight of bom] in this month’ : Tokyo saw 4 ful, coming in tions. Japanese bro minesweepers clearing Balik preliminary to rich oil . area coast. Another Tok a fleet of over ports was mai islands, 20 1 Okinawa. Th

bearing an armload of pink gladioli (o)\¢e of defeat. The Germans hate | ldrive across a flooded section of Her husband staggered to his rate ; dianapolis. During his first yed tried to intercept-the general's ca : { / : feet, but in was knock . out warrants against their atercep : § C4 Hitler because they were defeated. : : Le {the road and were swept into the “ again was knocked down. | y. perc whose identity is un- at Ben Davis high school he wi but the parade pace was too fast not because he brought on the war. TO : fe | creek. Dazed and bruised, Mrs. George known. Poli oo cE hin Fay | She dropped behind, a look of three-starfed - general said. 3 k { attempted to pull the men off and - , * ce are searching for the marksman medal and a ribbg chagrin and disappointment on her| yo po aonin talked of the old ; was slugged so hard she was Ap rics, | indicating efficiency in. other actif face. The general never saw her. “ome town. the general’ recalled | hurled trom the middle of the Police recently have been con- | ities in the school's R. O. T. C. Shouts “Hello” his davs ny: an employee of the | street to the sidewalk. ducting a traffic “education cam- | He attended St. John's Cathol On two occasions Gen. Smith Bemis Bag Co. During all this, only one witness Paign” in which they emphasized | cHurch. asions, Gen. Smit , i as iv destrians have the -of- | shouted a personal hello to indi- “Why: that’s the same cat I drew TE as an Sidesty beste right-of ro vers penides Jus patents of viduals, apparently recognized ac- when I worked in the office there.” | | April when they moved to a farm HA he a, 4 must stop v ; ; : « ba ers, Ka ' : s uain y \ id he looked surprisedly at! i : eating that, woman. Last night's fierce, merciless as- cia, 11; Stella Mae, 9, and Lorain SUSRIGIOS In we Duliade, OO Re Df Jun Brown: county. The assatlants climbed back | It cl dug- 7: his grandmother, Mrs. Williay the circle someone hurled a wad of the Bemis Bag stationery with the : : : i | They were believed en route to to the rack and ite es d a in Sau. c TR Ned a month _ of slug- | Woods 5 an Pai I confetti that failed to unfurl. It cat coming out of a bag printed at i & the farm from Indianapolis when Patrolman Carl Elder i Heh hn a 5 2 he Al, I un father Frank Jablonski Sol narrowly missed hitting other occu- the top i 'the accident occurred, at about 2 I' andoRob- ered and scores injured. . , Sullivay

| : . — — wz iMo. Hi t d pants of the car. Wants to Fish a Little i ; 3. 1. Monday, | a an i caine

: : J : > insite ticknats , Mallory’s and his_ father is a for Those riding with Gen. Smith wpe, the general leaves, for | | Ae sand | Mr. Haverly is survived by nis NEW. TAX RESEARCH beta inspite Daitieipation. by. oul man at Kingan's : ; were Mrs. Smith, Governor Gates, . i : : citizens in- the affairs of govern- ny * lation about w

: Sh : 3 ni : {wife, Sue, and a son, Roy, of In- . ; r wi Mayor Tyndall and ex-Governor Washington tonight, he has one | dinnapoit. opie : GROUP FORMED HERE ment.” Mr. Swank continued. “It. The body will be taken to ti going.

: ; is survived ri 4 ; 3 Tr , Seheicker, the latter conspicious by! thought in mind |by his mother. “Fair; just ahd equitable property will be specifically interested in the SJB, Hermann numeral hon South 15 ever-present white felt hat.

se “1 want to do a little fishing to- x S———————————————————— assessments” will be sought by the —————————— ————— The throng was thickest around uorrow” he said, “probably some- | DR. IRA PERRY DIES newly organized Indianapolis Assess- ental matters.” AUXILIARY TO MEET the circle and along Washington st. where on the Chesapeake.” NORTH MANCHESTER, June 20 ment and Tax Research association, SEER ort re | The Past Presidents associatid The he Circle Were Shoked One of the familiar army faces (U. P).—Funeral services will be OSCar A yank: its president, an- Que MAR) DOCKS of the Ladies auxiliary, Brothe with spectators some of whom los . id | ; . : le nounce ay. EW . June 2 ¥ — ai Tr iw their balance in the stress and BD To you eu) The ashes grew long on Lt. Gen. Walter Bedell Smith's cigaret held tomorrow for Dr. Ira G. Perry. Mr. Swank said the group also Te ce Sin Ho a strain and tottered precariously. wands. N. Y.. now a WAC at Stout! 2% he contentedly puffed away during a press conference at Stout 72, counselor for the Indiana State” would demand the “economical and liner which has shuttled American morrow at the Y. W. C. A. Mt

Telepljone Operator Mr. Haverly. telephone . operator at the Indianapolis union station since 1923, and Mr. Huff, a civilian {employee at Camp Atterbury, wesided at 1038 S. Rybolt ave. until

{

home-rule control of local govern- 1505 S. East st. ' The Japanes

sighted two al Miyako island, of -Okinawa. force included and a battles three battleshi On the Chi “Japanese were ng: another hi

dienapoli§ resident. {general and Mrs. 8mith, (just plain Maj. Gen. Asansiev, chief proses | scheduled to testify. The procession. progressed on ‘Norie” to “Beedle”) Birg. Gen. cutor, said in summing up the Red Defense counsel also said that as Washington st. to Pennsylevania Thomas North, representing Geil. army's case against the Poles that far as they were concerned, the case st, up Pennsylvania st. to North George C. Marshall, U. S. chief of he would insist they be imprisoned | Was clear and they would not quesst.: across North st. to Meridian Staff; Lt. Col. James Ballard Jr. {put would not demand the extreme | tion other witnesses. Okulicki was st: down Meridian st. to the aide to Gen. Smith, and Lt. Col. | penalty. not represented by counsel, but conCircle; around the west’ segment Ernest R. Lee aide to Gen. Eisen-| An earlier Moscow dispatch said ducted his own defense. of the Circle to Washington st. and hower, and an Indianapolis resident.’ jt appeared that several of the, One of the final witnesses yesterright on Washington st. to the Poles would be acquitted or at most day, Evgeni Chernowsky, president

Claypool. REPORT NAZIS TRIED set light prison sentences. of the Polish Democratic union,

There 600 persons attended a Word that the death sentence cleared Stanislaw Mikolajczyk, forluncheon in ion Smith's honor in TO WRECK TREASURES apparently had been excluded came mer premier of the Polish exile govthe Riley room. Speakers included! WIESBADEN, Germany, June 20 | at the outset of the third day of ernment in London, of connection Gen. Smith, Governor Gates and| (U, P.).—American officers said to-|the trial. The testimony was com- | with the Polish home army's alleged Eugene Pulliam, state war loan day that the Nazis had plotted to! pleted and final pleadings were un- attacks on the Red army. chairman. Activities were broad-' blow to smithereens millions of der way. | Chernowsky testified that Okucast throughout the nation over| priceless art treasures hidden in a Radio Moscow said judicial in- licki had told him that Mikolajczyk WIBC and the Mutual network. | salt mine near Salzburg. quiry into the charges was com-| Must be kept in ignorance of the In his address, Governor Gates| Maj. Bancel La Farge, Mount pleted this morning and Maj. Gen. existence of an underground organacclaimed Gen. Smith as a “fellow | Carmel, Conn., said that six cases of | Asansiev, Soviet military prosecutor, ization because Mikolajczyk might Hoosier” and described him as a | explosives were taken to the salt|opened his plea for conviction. come to an agreement with the “master military tactician who be- | mine last April. German curators Pifteen of the 16 defendants al- thal Polish provisional government gan his army career when he was| in the mine discovered the plot and ready have pleaded guilty to some I SRY. Aon nile Mik only 17 years old by joining the refused to carry out the demolition or all of the charges. | 1ajezyk in fact ya nde iY national guard.” a | instructions. The Moscow broadcast said three| representatives of the Warsaw govAs ‘Gen. Smith was riding up| While Nazi agents bickered with witnesses summoned at request of ernment and other Polish leaders in Washington st, prior to linking up | them, the curators hid some of the | the chief defendant, Gen. Leopold poscow under auspices of the allied with the parade on Capitol ave., he| explosives in bushes nearby. How- | { Okulicki, commander of the out-|Big Three. ) sighted Kingans’' packing Co. on ever, the agents did succeed in | lawed Polish home army, would not, A Moscow dispatch said the Irish hill on the background. | setting off some of the charges, for be able to appear today or to-| manner in which the prosecution “Well,” he sighed, “I know I'm! the mine's entrance was partly | morrow. | cross-questioned several of the home now, . . . There's Kingans.” caved in when American soldiers The plane on which the three lesser defendants indicated they It was a far cry from the little reached there. men were to be brought to Moscow would be acquitted or at most reFed schoolhouse at Reims The art was undamaged. was grounded by bad weather, the ceive light sentences

MEN OF THE SUBMARINES cis Chapter No. 9 of a new Book by Robert J. Casey

‘Moon’ Chapple—Shows What Sub Can Do

O MATTER who eventual-

' The Austral fungle to fight wrea of northw They made 1 bpposed gouthe irove two mile ber center of F boast advanced futong toward ilfields. Manila comn upport for .the leet massed ¢ inesweepers o But heavy be argets in the ney have eve

But Two. N | pr qr : w= WR IESE BENS | 3 COMMIT

(Continued

%ession got under way about five Italy and now is awaitin dis A | summer cottage on Lake Webster. “One of its main objectives will 1 jo : g her dis- M WwW "+ k Dac i J ican soldiers and 2200 sailors aboard. serve as hostesses minutes ahead of time, then rolled charge. She has 56 points. oOSCOwW on S eq McMurtry’s car. Khaki-painted | former Gov. Henry F. Schticker. One Chinese driven by trim, attractive WACS other state officials. | MOSCOW, June 20 (U. P.).— clear whether the men would be pase, . ; { : The Japanes Numerous children were among A guard of. honor of Stout. field underground leaders on trial mission to call six witnesses, but ‘ The Domei a the crowd at around 50,000. |Gen. Smith as he got’ out of his| sumably also te be imprisoned— Soviet Union and a third could not : . > ~ ‘crushing blow started from Capitol and Washing- Gen William D. Old of Stout field,| LONDON. June 20 (U. P.).—Mos-| The reference to the camp was WwW 66 * yy ’ 1 risions. e Make a “Specialty” of : Enemy force C. Marshall: Lt. Col. James Bal- Ft. Harrison and various military the death penalty for 16 Polish | that in view of the “clarity of the another 13-mil eral Eisenhower and also an In- ton at 7:45 a. m. today were the against the Red army. Eleven more witnesses had been river, a formids New

The welcome celebration Was feid Pfc. Pagels was working in field this morning. Medical association for 17 years. Dr. efficient collecting, budgeting “and troops to Europe during the war, Mabel Brown, Murs Sophia Wa : TT nnn miong at a rather speedy rate. Also or and 16 greet the much | p | { d p Fi onitese force army staff cars trailed Gen. \ayor Tyndall, Lt. ‘Gov. James. y miles from {i who received a certain amount of Guard of Honor | Soviet prosecutors ruled out the | heard later. th I 0! 1, nded by Lt. | : : ‘lightning” of] e parade witnesses. personne commanae: y here, asking prison sentences for the court said two were unavail- : nese forces ( Aids in Parade | plane. and the acquittal of three. appear because he was “on his way ton st. were Brig. Gen. Thomas headquarters of I Troop Carrier | COW announced today that the not clarified. ,0 make a stan lard Jr. aid to General Smith, and representatives. | underground leaders being tried on! case” against the 16 men, he would Smart Women Know SPUN RAYON is cooler! “Henn © IS COOICY. anced within t

marred only hy the fact the Pro- | Gen. Smith's office in Africa andi CEUs i {Perry died Monday night at his spending of governmental revenues.” arrived here today with- 12,256 Amer- and Mrs. Grace Alexander wi It was headed by Police. Chief Gecorated Hoosier were Gov. Gates suburbs of Liu S$ ; s, oh 9 : : The “BUY WAY” of Indianapolis Smith's auto. Some of these were Brig Gen. Elmer Sherwood and BULLETIN broadcast” said. It did not make ised as an attention on their own. death penally today for Polish Okulicki originally had asked perLiangsi provin Police Chief McMurtry estimated George Wheeler, marched to meet | four, conviction eof eight—pre- able because they were outside the og " m June 16 v Also in the parade. which! Other dignitaries present were| {to a camp. Nérth, representing Gen. George Command; Col. Henry E. Tisdale of | | Soviet prosecution was not asking, Asansiev announced last evening where the 37tl Lt. Col. Ernest R. Lee, aid to Gen-| In the plane which left Washing- charges of subversive activity not call any further witnesses. The 37th ci We Have Many Beautiful O dT i e Have Many Beautiful One and Two Pc. Styles in

We Show

of Our Large

Selection!

bout them in ussian siege ess said, Hitler's perso empke, gave ccount bearin 1at Hitler die efore it fell tc Kempke sai raun’s: body ttle before 3 e and Hitler |

Somebody mentioned drily that

ly writes a definite history of the activities of the submarines in this war, Lt. Cmdr. Wreford Goss “Moon” Chapple is certain to have an important place in it. For not only did he and his ship

Here is another condensed chapter from the dramatic and colorful book, "Battle Below, the War of the Submarines." by Robert J. Casey, famous Indianapolis Times war correspondent. Mr. Casey spent considerable time with the undersea fighters getting his material first-hand.

for business reasons—and into it~ TEN MINUTES later he fired tortake part In the most harrowing ij.. were bringing most of the pedoes, one at the second ship in adventure of the sea fighting for weight of troops and equipment line, the others a little ahead of the Philippines— with which they crushed MacAr-! their targets, a spread from which but he was like- thur's little army and took Manila he could easily hope for, at least wise the first cap- and Bataan and Corregidor and the two hits. ’ tain to demon- Philippines. All torpedoes missed. strate what sub-! The entrance to the bay is stfewn| The skipper had no explanation marines can get with reefs—dangerous shallows with | for his bad luck except that the into. And out of. jagged ranges, whose peaks are all Jap vessels were all of an old type] Furthermore the near the surface although patches |with shallow draft and that very story of his ex- of. them are awash and some Of |likely his fish had gone under them, ploit is the best them are covered with a. few feet no uu » documented bit of ‘of water at high tide. HE HAD no opportunity to mull

-

come out of the there ahout a dozen Jap destroyers | pedo wakes ‘in still- water on a southwest Pacific. and a fleet of smaller fast patrol bright morning were something that All in one dizzy day he slid over poats kept up a constant beat, the Japs couldn't very well have the reefs into a Jap port of dis- » sn overlooked. embarkation. He sank a transport! THERE WAS, apparently no net| He reloaded torpedo tubes as he and rammed a lighter. He went goross the entrance, but there dived and the express-train thunaground submerged on a mud flat p . der of high speed screws announced that lifted his bow virtually out of did’ stem 10 be any heed tor the arrival of trouble in the form of the water, where patrol boats were OPe—not .to the U. 8. submarine , couple of destroyers. dragging the lagoon to find. him. skippers. Nowhere was the water| But he stuck his periscope up He surfaced in broad daylight and very deep. And that’s why, when once more and took another fivesurvived, Capt. Chapple was ordered to go second 00k. f of a into this place, he elected to cross, A transport at anchor and getting THE STRIKING part of the rec- over the rocks, ready to debark troops, who were

Mr, Casey

ord would appear that he survived.!! “Well, he got u§ in all right,” massed all over her decks, was | The most graphic description of |Lasater: reminisced. “But I don't | squarely in te adie of his scale. |

the redoubtable captain was told know how he did it. I expected a|

me by Miles Lasater, motor machin- | spike of rock to be sticking ‘me in| HE FIRED ote torpedo as he,

ist 2-c, some time of Tucson, Ariz, [the tail any minute. Once we got | gave the-order to. dive again, And at the New London (Conh.) sub- over the reef the water was pretty that one hit 30 seconds after he marine base. - {deep and he pulled the plug.” let it gO.

Wreford Goss Chapple was born | 8 8 8 | The explosion was powerful

in Billings, Mont.—apparently the | CHAPPLE, in his account of the enough to jar the submarine—and | last place anybody would go looking | proceedings, says that he saw a considering the type of troopship | . for a submarine officer.

record that has! There is some open water, and over the problem because four tor-|

He played football on the local

- high school team, entered the U. 8.

| whole mass of transports and sup- |that was hit there has never been |

| {any doubt in anyone's ind. that | ply ships spread out like cars in a she tell apart.

paval academy in June, ‘1926, and {parking lot, with some destroyers

won letters " foothall and boxing.. ice them around in: 4p endless Eve without Wo. “alary., Lasater | ‘They were a temptation, he ad-| abe fo remember ot of ie mid: but’ soméwhat north of the f the trip north to the bay fea 10. which he had been sent. Bo regretfully he loft them. and

|: Once ‘the ship -hit a ledge and

The captain was in a worse spot then than’ he had been in before, Lecause there was considerably less water over his conning tower and “virtually none under his keel,

they were in a busy harbor. Lasater said he didn’t think ‘the amount of traffic had anything to do with it 5 ” » “IT TURNED out that when we firs¢ found that ledge we were right on the beach. “I've read reports that somebody tried to ram us while we were fiddling around in shallow water. But I don't think that's the way it happened. “I guess it~was us that tried to ram them. We run into a landing barge or something likesthat. We

{stove In a lot of superstructure.

When we finally got up to look at it ‘we found it was all busted up. “After we crashed this thing, whatever it was, we laid low in water that barely covered us, and in the evening we started away Copvright, 1945 by The hoses Times ne.

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istols Propaganda MN pls and his w an unknown ln the night of bre Berlin fell The Bunker asoline and se licide of Goe e chauffeur r Kempke said a m on M ther topfligh robably fatal] ee Berlin, They were M: arty leader; ate “secretary inistry who va, and Dr, § rsonal physic f Nazi resista:

ANNEXAT DRAWS

Opposition tc ight communit oiced last nig he Maple Lav harles Minte ded. Spokesmen ish to be ft: roper until t tter sewage eets and si Improvements, The commun fTected by the e L. E. Willi few, North F wh, Kessler on, North 1] ddition: .