Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 29 June 1945 — Page 2
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES Ten eal _ FRIDAY, JUNE 2), 1945
id Chatteror Face Chaos, NO. { INDUCTEE IN [sis sii iis Two Survivors of Bunker Hill BYRNES ADVOCATES Race Is Feature:
Ernest Lee of Indianapolis.
Vandenberg Tells Senate| STATE NOW MAJOR Sor Ee sree) Suicide Attack Are Home BUREAU SHAKEUR, Of Horse Show
‘janee Co. NEW YORK. J 0. A HORSE SHOW at the South ne 20 (U, P)— (Cotitinuéd From Page One) to world acceptance of the charter. ( © ontinued From Page One) (Continued From eg gne) May 11 off Okinawa until {t docked une por a stadium Wednesday, July 4, e
; {Former War Mobilizer James F.| win pe sponsored by the SouthOverton said he saw no reason for IN CITY TO CONFER {in Bremerton, Wash., June 3, Store= | 5.. : wi , Spons I Britain, the United States and public hearings on the question. under the selective service system { Byrnes, deseribed by White House port high school band and the
Jeen McDonald, 1423 w York keener McDenald work der ihe | i per McDenald wor Styos yolun- | g . Russia. °, “Everything in the charter has on Nov. 19, Iya, | ON POLIO ACTIVITIES st , and Seaman 1-¢ Gerald Conniff, |teer * ‘missions with the efeéption of |eircles as President Truman's choice | perry township horge patfol. | t
“ ; 3 § y te, dd In ai | ‘ace and 18 oth 8o far as peace en forcement is tter of public knowledge | Won Bronze Star son of Mr. and Mis. Leo L. Black,| a nrief convalescence after he was | TOF secretary of state, urge . A wild horse race an other concerned, I agree that there is peer oe Shee the Dum- | tie captured the title by. drawin Charles H. Bynam, director of the 62 N. 13th st., Beech Grove. lovercome by smoke. {magazine article today that Mr.| events will be on the program. jsubstance fo this contention’ Re np; Gaks meeting last fall” he | the Sowist’ rier from Y hat ats Negro activities division of the Na- And waiting in Seattle, Wash, t0| A former student at Technical | (Truman be: given power fo reor-| prizes totalitig $300 are being said. “But I hasten to assert that, oq Pt. Harrison where he. and 14 tional Foundation for Infantile €ome home is Seaman 1-c Charles phigh school, he worked at Lukas- |ganize the Expestive Dien y he offered. Rules of the Western 80 far as force is concerned, We| ‘pypyc hearings would serve Nolotner selective service volunteers, | | Paralysis, will spend several days D. Alley, 18-year-old son of MI. Harold before entering service in SOvernment os Bina 8 aie Riders association will govern world is at the mercy of RUSSIA... except publicity for those|were inducted. in Indianapolis in the interest of and Mrs. D. N. Alley, 2161 Winler| september, 10 He hat 4 brother, | 16 0 Manpower ane money Whe shaw, Great Britain and the United States o, "0 4" oon being heard. I| Since then he's been to England, 1 polis ave. JMseninis Mate 3-c Gene Mec. | Byimes said Mr, Truman should | Members. of the Perry townregardless of whether.we form this | think it would be a fine thing if the'lts Africa, back 16 England, then to the foundation. | Hurled Into Magazine ald, with the Seabees on Oki- %® given sweeping powers. includ- | ship horse patrol, originally or- .- league or not. Those happen to be Storekeeper McDonald was mane | jdenal ling the right to merge the war and | ganized for civilian. defense, may
% Mr. Bynam is visiting Indianap-| : senate promptly ratified the charter France and finally to Germany. | the facts of life.” : sOTL navy departments into a “depart- ot enter the show. The field eservations. It would exert | . olis as part of a tour covering most Seaman Connift had been with - n But, he argued, the world would Without reservations. During all this time, he was at P ire ag ig bird the Bunker Hill since Jan. 10. ment of the armed services” em-| will be open to riders and horses
. splendid: influénce on the rest of the tached to Eisenhower's heacquur- of the states in thé nation. He : be more at the mercy of those pow- world. It would expedite their con- ters in a communications unit. Re-| Was to hold a meeting at 3 P. M. 1 ed into a magazine, where he Zousht at Okinawa bracing the coast guard and ma-| from other clubs. rful forces without a charter than g 2 Fines 8s well as the army and navy.
[sideration and ratification without cently, he was awarded the bronze | today in the office of L. J. Badol- | ought ‘to kt the fire from 1 it would be with it. | reservations.” star for meritorious service in the let, chairman of the Marion county | 8 ph Zep, Le Seaman Oonniff attended Beech| Byrnes said in an article in the QLD HICKORY ORY DIVISION “Without the charter there is no| haut f th tional foundation. spreading to ammunition. Grove and Sacred Heart high |Jlly issue of American Magazine curb upon these great military pow-| Connally declined direct comment | communications field. j Shapley oO: ihe nal 0 lude |. Almost’ overcome by Smoke, the|c. o b F IE ted in the |that there were 101 executive TO BE REDEPLOYED ers except rivalry between them— {except ey ihe SA with Oversens tor Srios, Mra yan, Ee HL itticjonn, “br. Benjamin | Indianapolis sailor and some of his Soi in ial 1044 whe agencies which “overlap, intertwine| PARIS, June 20 (U. P). — The g er v al “reflects the enthusiasm wit ithout ingle furlough home, | | jr > ’ . "EL ' yy bee ary fo gle: Igy | Phich the senate receives the! ye well igh the 85 A. <Osborne, P. B. Ransom, State SOMpANIGhS dipped .cloths into 8 A bluejacket for 11 months, Sea- sd FH compete. . Be ig 30th infantry division, the eRek n ro $ | hu ¥ { y e situation as wasteful of “man« |« Hickory'%. outfit (trained at Aggressor on Spot jenarter) semen Poittts. Joule Ir 3 om harge. De bo XL. frigging while they were fighting fires. He ht ue Sle patents that he power and money.” was the latest one “With the charter there a. He's snviols to returs to Sivan secretary of am county | | later volunteered for several tasks, |planeg crashed with their #500 Selmi etre tte — to be marked for redeployment life, @ d to I arents, but . ’ Hr J) ) . least the restraint of a Senet ek ams Ba : Ned chapter, and Miss Betty Malinka, | roving ammunition overboard, [pound bombs into the carrier. PLAN DINNER AND’ CARDS The 30th, which fought from t, for whatever that may| [ftitiks he'll be with. supreme alle tat entative for the na | carrying casualties to safe spots and | Before the Bunker Hill tragedy | Monumental division, 128, auxil-| Normandy to Magdeburg ih Gercontrac or % {headquarters in Germany for some | S!ale TEPIes “| retrieving the bodies of fatalities | yo sion, ' ! be worth, and the grim assurance| time to come | tional foundation. irom compartments {Seaman Alley fought in the\ Oki-|iary of the Brotherhood of Locomo-| many, is ‘due to arrive at Camp that the aggressor who breaks this) FOR SLUR ON FOR : During his stay in the city it is PRFVTISNSS. inawa and Iwo Jima campaigns and | tive: Engineers, will hold a covered | Oklahoma City in the Rheims ascontract will stand in naked infamy | Buddy of Col. Lee | expected that Mr. Bynam will in-| Hit by Two Planes his ship bombarded Tokyo. |dish dinner and card party at 6:30 | sembly area on July 10. It is the before the embattled conscience of] EAST CHICAGO, Ind, June 29| His folks say Maj. Kelley “doesn't | terview various Negro editors and From the time the ship was, A former Technical high school |p. m. tomorrow at 5420's E. Wash=| 13th division assigned to redeployan outraged world.” U. P)—Miss Nellie I. Mills, 53, know whether Gen. Eisenhower |civic leaders. | struck by two Jap suicide plancs student, he now is in Seattle, Wash. | ington Stu ment. ag Strasse hat signature ou] planned today to appeal the action | - e charter carr y ' : responsibilities for preserving the of the East Chicago school board peace, particularly on the major which removed her as a high school powers strong enough to make a teacher on a charge of slurring the War. name of the late President Roose“You may say this will not work,” velt. he declared. “I answer that I do! Miss Mills was removed by a 2 to not know: but I think it will, at|1 vote. She had been’ charged with feast so long as this charter holds|saying to her class after Mr. Roosethe major powers in harmony. I {velt's death, “For the first time in answer that I propose to try the|12 vears I can pledge allegiance to
only ehance.” America.” The dismissed teacher's s attorney,
Veto Power Practical Allen P. Twyman, indicated he] He said that if the time ever would take the case into court. He came when the big powers no long- (said the board had acted illegally | er lived in harmony, no pact could because no complaint had been filed prévent war. {by School Supt. A. C. Senour. He said the veto power accorded| -Senour, who had said the charges the five big powers was practical|against the teacher did warrant dis.and desirable because: missal, opposed the board's action. | . It substantially reflects the Officials of the State Teachers’ Asworld’s realities. sociation have threatened to have 3. The so-called special privilege the school dropped from accredited | of the great powers is matched by lists bécause of political interference | equivalent special responsibilities. |py the schéol board. 3. There is no alternate basis
upon which to launch this great) bitrus 'MITSCHER SCORNS 4. 1t is a protection against | American involvements which many millions of our citizens would re- SUICIDE PLANES
quire as the indispensable price of our adherence to this treaty. SAN DIEGO, Cal., June 29 (U.P.). Pace of History ~Viece Adm. Mare A. Mitscher said
Vandenberg said he was against today that Japanese suicide at“precipitous haste” or “undue de-| tacks were only about one-per cent lay” in consideration of this treaty.| effective. ™ But, he urged, “history is writing] Mitscher left the aircraft carrier | with a rushing pen and we must Bunker Hill only after two suicide | gecommodate its pace.” planes blasted her into a mass of | “If America is to assume the charred wreskage and established moral leadership of a better world his headquarters on an unnamed in which we have fought our way second carrier. to glorious eminence, we can| Three days later the naval com- | séarcely be content to be among mander révealed, a flaming Japthe last who care or dare to speak anese plane, shot down by the when this United Nations roll is ship's anti-aircraft: guns, crashed called.” {into the second carrier, engulfing it | In conelusion, Vandenberg re- in flames and destroying the ad-| peated that the pending charter is miral’s quarters. thé only plan available for inter-| “They always get the admiral's hational co-operation in pursuit of quarters,” Mitscher said. peace and justice. He moved to a third carrier, Isolationists Friendly | where he remained until returning
“It is laden with promise and ¥o hit home hefe. el
With hope he said. “Tt deerves DEAT) INE NEARS ON | “America has everything to gain] . AUTO TAX STAMPS
and nothing to lose by giving it support: Everything to lose and, Tomorrow is the last day to buy fothing to gain by declining this Auto use tax stamps before the éontinued fraternity with th e| deadline. United Nations in Behalf of the] The $5 stamps, to be placed on dearest dream of mankind. 1 com- [the lower right-hand corner of the! mend it to congress and the coun-| Windshield, are on sale in all posttry.” offices and in the internal revenue Meanwhile, the charter which |offices in Indianapolis, Evansville, | President Truman personally will|Ft. Wayne, Gary, Lawrenceburg, | submit to the senate at 12 noon | Muncle, South Bend and Terref (Indianapolis time) Monday, gained | Haute. open support from other so-called| Drivers without use stamps after] isolationist senators. Sunday will be subject to penalty.
Committee to Decide
Senator Robert M. Larollette ®., OFFICIAL WEATHER
Wis), told the senate he intends|______ to vote for its ratification. Sena-|
tor C. Wavland Brooks (R. 1m), | (All Data Jn contr) War Time)
said that as matters now stand it| oe ee may also get his support. Sunrise .. ...:5:19 | Sunset ... 8 1 Both of them joined in blocking | Ptecipitation 24 hrs. end. 7.30 a. m. 00 an effort by Senator John H. Over-| I!41 precipitation {0 dan 1...000 ton (D La) to circumvent commit ee tee hearings and begin floor debate ic, erarures Tor 12 nour ending Ea es as soon as the president's appear-/p. m. vesterday and the lowest temperaance is ended. Brooks said he would | 5% for 13 hours ending at 7.30 a. m not object, however, to the adminis] igh Low | tration’s speedup plan which con- 3 8» sispsciceres 98. 1 templates a vote by mid-August. Overton's resolution was referred cieveiand to the senate foreign relations com- Denver mittee which meets tomorrow to de- 0 ansville cide on its schedule of hearings. Overton said he talked to nearly 40 senators about his suggestion Mi and a vast majority of them were!) favorable. He ’ said - Connally “raised no objections.’ Echoing ~Connally's plea prompt ratification as an incentive ©,
IN INDIANAPOLIS
EVENTS TODAY |dJerome Dale Reese, 131 Lexington: ‘Jo
{ National Executive committee of American ,. 200 Murphy 841 EF. 16th § Legion, meeting Bal) Jouls Reed 1019 E. Ohin: Frances Indiana Associat'on of Elementary School Ri ‘atson Bkagge 1018 E. Ohin Prineipals Butier university tia hand Fugen oa er, Ki ightstown J. dor Chamber of Commerce, banquet David Yi Joan Ho BOR sacy + 16th 6:30 pm, Marott hotel ny QF aurer, 1031 MN. Delaware hi Delts Theta, iuncheon, Columbia slub | 3 fei Mcille Burton, R. R. 1, Box| i ung, Hot nfiang Futiers] Qlreviory, meeyng, Hote a Hibbitl. 733 W. 14th: Edith Mae n 731 WwW t Indiana School Supply Distributors asso-| gaward 2 gle kay ‘ A LL Pos Mae | ciation, meeting 4nd luncheon, Hotel a a1 Mansel, =| Lincoln. Frank W ie, Cam t Indiana Independent Petroleum associa Bay aide on A tion, dinner, 6 p. m.. Hotel 8everin » Co-Operative ¢lub, dinner, 6 p. m, Co-| lumbis club | BIRTHS Sigma Chi, luncheon, noon, Columbia club. | GIRLS Delta Tau Delta, luncheon, noon, Colum-| , ’ bia club At St. Francis—Raymond, Anna Care | Optimist elub, luncheon, noon, Columbia Jizchael Omar, Bernice Christopher;
eroy, Dorothy Smith |
coffee pot: and covered their faces!
. 8. Weather Bureau
terbury, Mary
Exehan olud, luncheon, noon, Claypool At Coleman-<Robert, Betty Hicks | alge ' At Methodist—Ceorgh Margaret Antrim. | Daryl, Ethel Hess; Joseph, Ruth Jack- | EVENTS TOMORROW son Glenn, Marjorie Marshall
, At St. Vincent's Harry, Esther Chris National Executive Committee of amr man; Clayton, Florence Evans.
lean Legion, meeting. BOYS
MARRIAGE LICENSES Ab at Francis~Matthew, Frances Mes-|
aa ny Patrikaris, 1401 N. New hy fit ney Ann Gilliland, 1401 N. aly a iahadl, Virginia Baker: Charles |
aod Butler $18 ‘8 E Washington: At Methodist—Ray, Rosemarie Trimmell
Davidso At St. Vinecent's—Elliott, Flora Gill; John
nso; 0 Lauige Hofer, Alfred, Marie Mader, oi XT dh otis; Ruth Charles,’ Doris Westenhofer, Be iy Hagerty,
EB \ em Ie ok is, DEATHS . A
Ruth’ Lambert, 3p. at Emhardt, cere. bral hemorrhage v | mverstt T. O'Connor, one month, at Bt | Vincent's, malnutrition , old rnack, 60, at Methodist, | eriosclerosis ore Pruitt, hy WM City, uremia, I a ‘Long,’ cerebral |
6 at oily, Li iim
