Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 6 July 1945 — Page 15
Wer
¢ Read KS se isl
+ July 6. Lt Vinship, U. 8.
ship are on a
ng © thelr mare n Lhe St. Bavo 2 Rev. Fr. Otto
Miss Darothy ughter of Mrs. his eity, The are Mr. and 521 Powell pl,
/ ants included
naid of honor; ns, bridesmaid, jel, flower girl,
his sor’s best were Lt. Care . N. R, Riche (J.g) Thomas NaR., Lincoln,
kfast in the th Bend, there n the Brower day, Lt. and e at hame in ‘idegroom is a raduate and is , Gamma Rho
By Units re White Cross it week in the ir, Third Chris. Baptist; Tuesjodist, Calvary ; Wednesday— st and Perry
ple Sisterhood, and Ben Davis, abernacle Gar- , Marytha, Beta leyan Service.
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t 4
APY SPOR
_||""n"n".
Warfime Eating 4 Meta Given .
looks like sunshine and .its taste is’ tain air,
THERE IS NO MORALE LIFTER in the way of food that does a better job on a hot, humid day than an airy, tart dessert.
Lemon fluff as tangy and refreshing as moun-
When you plan to make this dessert from today’s menu, hunt for
your best looking gelatine mold a Put the gelatine to soften the first thing and grate the lemon rind as late as you can:and grate it onto a plece of waxed paper and cover so if it must stand a few minutes you can hang on to that delightful and rare fragrance.
‘ a «8 : MONDAY MENUS Breakfast Apple sauce.
Cooked hot cereal. Cinnamon toast.
Luncheon
Creamed egg on toast. Buttered green beans.
‘Bread. Walnut bars. : Dinner Pan-fried white fish with lemon butter. :
Parsley potatoes. Buttered spinach. Cabbage salad. Bread. Lemon souffle (see recipe). Milk to drink: Four. c. for each
child; 1 e. for each adult. Ration points? None. . s ” "
Lemon fluff: Five tsps. granulated gelatine, 2 c. cold water, 4 eggs, separated, 1 c. sugar, 1'2 tsps. grated, jemon rind, 4 ¢. lemon juice, 14 tsp. salt. Soften gelatine in Told water. Place over hot water until completely dissolved. Beat egg yolks thoroughly and gradually add sugar, beating continually, Add lemon rind, juice and salt. Beat well, then add the cooled gelatine and again beat until mixture is thoroughly blended. Whip the egg whites until stiff, then fold in the egg yolk mixture, lightly but thoroughly. Turn| into a 6 c. size mold that has been | rinsed in cold water. Cover and place in refrigerator to chill until firm. Unmold and serve with sweetened whipped cream and sprinkle with finely shaved pistachio. Six servings. » o FREE: META GIVEN'S leaflet— “Hot Breads Like Mother Used td Make,” Address Meta Given, 214 W. Maryland st., Indianapolis 9. Inclose a. large 3-cent, stdmped, selfaddressed envelope ‘with your re-
. quest.
Sea Food Hint
_ Pungent accompaniment for shrimps and other sea food: A
nd get all your ingredients ready.
Pretty Apron
tb tel 1 1 1 i cr.
By MRS. ANNE CABOT
Your entire family will think you look very young and gay indeed when they -find you wearing this
summery-looking “flower - pot” apron. Make it of pink and white checked cotton——do the flower pot
|pocket in a pinkish-brown or a
dusty pink. Applique the flowers onto the apron. Use scraps of bright color and do the leaves in dark green. To obtain complete pattern and applique pattern for the flower pot apron (Pattern 5007) small, medium and large sizes included, send 16 cents in coin, your nare, address and the pattern number to Anne Cabot, The Indianapolis Times, 530 -S. Wells st.,, Chicago, 17.
Remove Surface Dye
Always wash a new dark slip before wearing to remove excess sure face dye. Otherwise, it may rub off to soil-the skin and leave almost indelible stains on foundation gar-
small daub of horseradish on oyster crackers. >
ments and the dress, too.
eat, the numbing cold oxhole mud. He knew t otony, the grim drudgery
and the life of this tough
~—inspired-this-memeorable G. I. JOE with Ernie's Meredith.
n a hell-racked day last April, Ernie Pyle sent a note from Okinawa to That Girl in Albuquerque:
“I'm on another invasion. I never intended to. But I must cover the Marines and the only way to do it honestly is to go with them... I've promised myself and I prom. ise you... I will never go on another one.”
Emie’s promise is kept.
But his spirit lives on, in the heart of every G.I... and in the hearts of folks at home who fearfully, hopefully await the return of their loved ones. rnie Pyle endured with them the searing desert
he unspoken terror at the scream of a shell. And e shared it all with quiet courage, even to the ultimate experiertce of death.
His words, too, live on in the warm human stories that bring home the life of your man at war,
was there with him. His great book Here I's Your War
We have been privileged to publish a special " motion picture edition of this great book, illustrated with photographs from the magnificent Lester Cowan production. You will want to see this United Artists picture, of course ... and you will want to .own the book as a living memento of one of the truly great souls of our time.
4 FORUM MOTION PICTURE EDITION
ne World. PUBLISHING COMPANY CLEVELAND AND "w " Tom >
of sodden pup-tents and he dragging hours of mo,the high drama of danger,
but gentle little guy who
new- film, STORY-OF role. enacted by Burgess
: Now $100
OVER 2,000,000 COPIES IN PRINT
ares Books are Sold :
{division, 8. {a cousin of Mr. and Mrs. Arthur
DEAD
Veteran of four Pacific campaigns, Aviation Radioman 3-c Barney Garland Neal, lost his life May
11 on. the 8S. 8. Bunker Hill off Okinawa. The 20- year-old serviceman was the son” of Mr.’and Mrs. Barney A. Neal, 1130 Oliver st, formerly of 1222 N. New Jersey st. Entéring the navy 13 months ago, he went overseas last January, seeing action
Kyushu as well as Okinawa, Radioman Neal attended schools in Milltown, Ky., and was awarded a scholarship to the University of Kentucky, where he was a student one year. He also was employed at the Burnet-Binford Lumber Co. Surviving besides the parents are a brother, Billy Parker, and a sis-
ter, Mary Jo, both of Indianapolis, . : n " td WOUNDED—
T. 4th Gr. James“E. Crowe, son of Mr. and Mrs. James Crowe, R. R. 3, Box 431, was wounded June 8 in the Philippines. He is now in a hospital overseas. A member of the medical corps, Technician Crowe attended Plainfleld schools and was an employee of the Pennsylvania railroad before he entered the army March 4, 1943. He has been overseas two years. » » ” A member of the 38th infantry Sgt. Eugene H. Stacey,
Dean, 115 N. Belmont ave. was| wounded on Luzon early this] month,
Sgt. “Stacey is the son of Mrs. Viola Sparks, Jeffersonville, He attended schools in Knightstown and
has been in the army four years. He has received the purple heart. » o s An infantryman, Pvt. Paul P. Speth, husband of Mrs. Dolores M. Speth, 2325 Shelby st., was wounded May 31 on Okinawa. He is now at a hospital in Louisville, Ky. Pvt. Speth is a graduate of Sacred Heart high school and was employed by ‘the Omar Bakery Co. before he entered the army in September, 1944. He has been overseas since February. The son of Mr. and Mrs. Edward Speth, 2140 S. Delaware st., Pvt. Speth has three brothers, Yeoman 1-c Leonard Speth in North Carolina, Sgt. Francis Speth in Florida and Edward, who was recently discharged from the army.
” o ” -« Marine Pfc. William Henry Flod- | der, son of Mrs. Mary Louise Case, |1101 E. Washington st., who was wounded April 16 on Okinawa, is now in the naval hospital at Newport, R. I. Overseas two year§ Pfc. Flodder was fighting with the 6th marine division when hit, He ‘has been in ‘service 31 months, was in action on Guadalcanal and New Georgia and holds three presidential citations and the purple heart. Formerly of Rushville, the .22-year-old serviceman attended high school there and was employed by the . International Harvester Co. Inc., here. Thrée of his brothers also in serv{ice are” 1st Lt. Richard P. Flodder, {a radar observer on a B-29 based on Tinian; Ship's Cook 3-¢ John L. Flodder, who has served 18% months in the European theater and is now in the Pacific, and Pvt. James R. Flodder, who is taking his basic training in Alabama. ” » 2 Pfc. Daniel E. Carnes, son of Mr. and Mrs. Albert E. Carnes, 416 W. McCarty st., was seriously wounded
THoosler Heroes: Seven Listed
as Wounded i
in raids on Tokyo, Iwo Jima and| 5;
Robert Tompkins, son of B. H. Tompkins, 955 N. LaSalle st.,, was killed May 4“when his ship was hit by a Jap plane somewhere in the Pacific.
Fireman 1l-¢ Tracy
filtrated during the night, later to|p be driven off by. a flame thrower. The 19-year-old soldier entered service in September, 1844, and went overseas in February. A brother, T% Sgt. Albert E. Carnes, is home. on furlough now after spending eight moriths overseas with the 15th air force as a radio gunner. He holds
{the air medal with two oak leaf
clusters. Both brothers were graduated from Scipio high school and were previously employed by the Advance Paint Co. o ” ” 8S. Sgt. George L. Brown, brother of Mrs. Ruby Nell, 626 Massachusetts ave, who was wounded. three
pital in Hawaii. An infantryman, Sgt. Brown was’
| wounded twjce on Saipan and once
on Okinawarog April 18. In service five years, he 8" 26, and has been overseas four years. A brother, S. Sgt. Lonnie Brown, was wounded in Belgium, where he was serving with an engineer battalion. ‘Both attended Bedford schools. : 8 ” n -Sgt. Ernesto Ferrer, son of Mr. Mr. and Mrs. Ernesto Ferrer, 1226 N. Oxford st. was wounded May 29 on Okinawa. He is now in a hospital in Hawaii, -A former employee of the -In|dianapolis Water Co. Sgt. Ferrer is a graduate of Technical high school and attended Butler University’ for three years. He is the husband of Mrs. Louise Ferrer of
‘Grand Rapids, Mich.
2 = # STATE— The names of the following Indiana servicemen appear on today’s official casualty lists:
NAVY .DEAD Marine Pvt. Joseph ‘John Altherr Jr, Elwood; Beaman 1-¢ Kenneth Wayne Modesitt, Brazil; Aviation Radio Technician 1-¢c Edward Harmon Nightenheiser, Arcadia; Machinist's Mate 2-c Leonard John Snowberry, Clinton. NAVY WOUNDED
Marine Pvt. Allen Warren Biggs, West Lafayette; Marine Cpl. Norbert John Buechler, Ferdinand; Marine Pfc. William Hugh Flewallen, Evansville; Marine Pfc. William Grant Prost, Greenfield: Marine Cpl. Joseph Piske Isler, Jeftersonyille; Coxswain Carl Eugene Moran, Martinsville; Pireman 2-c Robert Ivan Nichols, New Albany: Gunner's Mate 1-c¢ Arthur Anderson Russell Jr., Logansport; Seaman 1-c William Henry Shapland, Coshers Sonarman 2-¢ John Burnett 8ims, Mitch ell; Fireman 1-¢ Carl Herman Stewart, Terre Haute. NAVY MISSING Pireman 1-¢ Steve Rivalsky, Hammond; Seaman 1-¢ Vincent Arthur Runduist, Anderson; Seaman 1-¢ dward wood Slater 8r., Goshen; Seaman 1-c Clarence ames Stitt, Ft Wayne. ARMY DEAD—PACIFIC REGIONS Technician 5th Gr. Leroy J. Egler, Jasper; Sgt. Ralph B. Nondoneide, Jasper. ARMY WOUNDED—EUROPEAN REGIONS Technician 4th Gr. Ft. Wayne. ARMY WOUNDED-—PACIFIC REGIONS 8. Sgt. Frank N Alvey, Evansville; 8. Sgt. Alvin 8. Bettag, Dale: Pvt. William A. Bingham, Loogootee; Pvt. “Russell E. Borton, South Bend; Pvt. Keith C. Brown, Fountain City; T. Sgt.
Charles M. i linger, Milan; Pfc. Mitchell; Sgt. Herbert E. Borbly, Union
May 27 on Okinawa when Japs in-
City; Sgt. Glendon Crawley, Greencastle; Pfc. Frederick J. Cunningham, Hebron;
Local Saoman Is Deed,
Robert D. Hughes, |
in Pacific Arco
Z
" : Bh ; AQ
Aviation Radioman 3-¢ Barney
Garland Neal . . . died aboard’ the U. S. S. Bunker Hill off Okinawa.
Pfc. Herman V. Doyle, Vallonia; Pfc. Garrett J. Eriks, ‘Highland; 1st Lt. John Franklin, Attica; Pfc. John Fritz, Gary: ple, J Jack W. Goerte, Columbia ‘City; Pvt. Hubert 8. Gilliland, Evansville; Pvt, Carl H. Harmeyer, Dillsboro; 8. Sgt. Loren J
Heaton, Sharpesville, T. Sgt. Michael J.
Kulinski, W. Terre Haute, Pfc. Clive M. Leach, Hebron: 8. Sgt. Frank. A. Lester, Remington; Pfe. Ray-
mond K. Maxwell, Hammond, Pvt. Charies H. McKimmy, Terre Haute, T. Sgt. oy E. Perry, Winslow; Pvt, James E. Senesac, West Lafayette; Pfc. Lamoine G. Smith, Anderson; 1st Lt. Charles W . Brownstown, Pfc. Raymond .. Decker; Pvt. 8. Strange, ashington; Sgt. Harry H. Young, Fordville. ARMY® MISSING—PACIFIC REGIONS Sgt. Joseph R. Willis, Petersburg. LIBERATED FROM GERMAN PRISONS Pfc. Glenn R. Stealy, Goshen;’ Pvt. Charles. A. Vayhinger, Madison; Sgt. George A. Wall, Linton.
; times, is now recuperating at a hos- PLANE WITH BRITISH |
OFFICIALS MISSING
air ministry announced today that a transport command Liberator carrying . attaches of - the British government homebound from the
San “ Frahcisco © conference was missing on the Atlantic route. The plane left Montreal for
London on the évenihg of July 3.
for the plane along the intended route. Passengers included Sir William Malkin, legal adviser to the foreign office; Col. Capel Dunn, office of the defense ministry; A. T. Peel of the India office; Miss M. J. C.|
J. M. Cole Hamilton of the foreign office; Miss B. Hibberd of the India office, and Miss P. M. S. Spurway of the cabinet office. The crew was Pilot Captain G. P. Evans, an American citizen; Capt. J. W. Rose, co-pilot, an American; C, 'P. J. Meagher, radio operator; Canadian Flying Officer R. M. Patterson, navigator; G. B. Swaney, flight engineer, ‘and acting Sgt. W. T. Keates, freight clerk.
COMMISSION FINES TWO TAVERN OWNERS
Fines were levied against two Indianapolis tavern owners by the state alcoholic beverages commission today. They are Dennis Bush, 228 S. Illinois st., fined $100 for selling more than four quarts of whiskey in a single sale; and Kire Dumcoff, 926928 W. New York st, fined $25 for selling liquor at over-the-ceiling prices:
MOSCOW LAUDS ROOSEVELT LONDON, July 6 (U. P.).—The Moscow radio said today that maintenance of peace and co-opera-tion among the United Nations is a “debt we all owe to the memory of the great President Roosevelt, a true champion of peace and security.”
Cordially Invites You
to See the
General Electric
* How
8:15 P. M., July 11th at
Purdue Center, 902 N: Meridian
Tickets, Without Charge, Available at Wasson’s Appliance Store, Monument Place
freeze
to prepare, and cook
decided today
her mountain retreat to return to
| Mrs, [to abandon a life of nature.
LONDON, July -6 (U. P.).—The|
Air and sea craft were searchinig|”
Scuphem of the foreign office; Miss |
[CAVE DWELLER | BACK TO CITY
Sheriff Forces 40 40- Yea. Old! Woman to Quit Hideout.
SALIDA, Colo, July 6 (U, P).— Husky, 40-year-old Edith Carlson that city life way better .than cave dwelling and left
|
her husband in Minnesota. Police Chief Julius Masters helped Carlson reath ‘her decision He deposited the woman four miles from Salida with the promise she would retuPfn home to accept civilization = and refrain from frightening any more farmers with her “wild man” tactics. The cave woman, armed with a hunting knife, was arrested on a vagrancy charge after farmers reported a wild. man living in a cave at the foot of Methodist mountain. Her attire—blue slacks, a sweater and a lumberjack—had made them believe: she was a man, None Too Pleasant Mrs. Carlson went willingly to police headquarters, where she ad-
mitted the fare she had gleaned
from a garbage dump during her three-day sojourn with nature was
DON'T DRESS ‘EM UP— Mauldin Won't "Actin eis - Of Own Book
HOLLYWOOD, July 8 (U. P). —Cartoonist Bill Mauldin today turned down a job as movie actor in the film version of his own book. : He said he would serve as technical adviser to see that Holly- | wood doesn't dress up his Willie and Joe cartoon characters, » » » ¢ G. I. Artist Mauldin sold the screen rights to his best-selling “Up Front With Mauldin” to. Producer Bill Goetz for a picture based on the bewhiskered | battle heroes; whose gripes and quips. made them the most entertaining doughboys of world war IL . The film won't, Mauldin hoped, be “just another war movie.” The 23-year-old artist from | Phoenix, Ariz, said he didn't want to sell the screen rights in the first place. He gave in after Producer Goetz guaranteed not to make Hollywood heroes out of
Willie and Joe. | »
” ” MAULDIN, honorably dis-
none too pleasant, She. shyly told Masters she had
lived in Minnesota with her hus- | Then she]
| band until a year ago. ft him and struck out on the |open road.
After living in Denver and Buena |
Vista, Colo, | the cave, “It seemed more hospitable tani city life,” she said. When faced with the vagrancy| charge, however, Mrs. Carlson said | she might as well return to Minnesota and make up with her husband. Masters said he would drop the charge if she would keep her promise.
she finally went to
Heart on Wrong Side Saves Life
HONOLULU, July 6 (U. P.).— Pvt. Kenneth 'W. Cunningham, 20, laughed at Japanese marksmanship today. An enemy Bullet aimed. at his heart missed its mark because his heart wasn’t there. The army newspaper Stars and Stripes reported from Okinawa that Cunningham was shot in the upper chest. Doctors were amazed that he still was alive, because the bullet pierced the area where the heart is located normally. But they discovered that Cunningham’s heart is on the right side.
charged with 131 points, said the stydio had offered him a role in the picture, but he turned it down, “I'm going to be technical adviser to make sure the studio follows the spirit of my book. But I don’t know about acting.- It doesn’t strike me as any way to earn a living.”
|
|
(CHILDREN TO STUDY CARE OF ANIMALS
_Tralning in the care of animals will be given this summer to chil dren attending the city’s various jteetention centers, : “This may be the answer to the stray dog problem here,” declared Mrs. Howard Harrington, a director. of the new Indiana Society for the Prevention of CFiiélty to Animals. Mrs. Harrington completed arrangements today with Paul Brown, city parks superintendent.
The plan is borrowed from Massachusetts, ‘where children’s groups | of 30 each study the care of animals, make scrap books, bird houses ahd listen to animal stories read to them. Miss Betty Kelliher and Mrs. Mildred Orrid will assist Mrs. Harring-
|But Further Hearings Are
| der
- Due Next Fall.
WASHINGTON, July 8 (U. Pw Foes of compulsory peacetime mili« tary training today were assured
{of another chance to argue their {cause before any legislation is rece
ommended to congress. The house post-war military policy committee recommended ‘yesterday ‘that ‘a peacetime training program be incorporated into the future national defense program. But Rep. Andrew J. May (D. Ky.) announced that further hearings on the sube
| ject would be held next fall,
May, chairman of the house milie tary affairs committee, said that legislation on the controversial subs ject would be the “full and final responsibility” of his group. “Therefore it will be necessary to have further hearings,” he'said, “to secure the best judgment of all
{who have something worthwhile to
| contribute on this -far-reaching | question that Is so important and {vital to all our people.” He said the military policy come | mittee, headed by Rep. Clifton A, | Woodrum (D. Va.) can ‘only make | “policy” recommendations and une house rules, cannot submit legislation.
NEW YORK, July 6 Senator Robert A. Taft (R. 0) sald last night that the principle of peacetime military conscription was “thé essence of tptaltarianism.™ Debating the question “should we have universal military training after the war?” over the national network of the American Broade casting Co., Taft said that peace time military conscription would abridge the freedom for which the war is being fought. Dr. Felix Morley, president of Haverford college, spoke on the negative side of the question with Taft. Dr. Edward C. Elliott, presi dent of Purdue university, and Bure gess Meredith, movie actor and a former captain in the army air forces, took the affirmative. “One reason all arfny officers want conscription is because they . don't take any interest in the ime proved conditions necessary to’ get an army on a voluntapy basis and don't want to be bothered with it,” Taft charged.
(U. P).—-
INITIATION CEREMONIES
Maj. Harpld C. Megrew auxiliary, 3, ‘United Spanish War Veterans
{will hold initiation ceremonies and
business meeting at 8 p. m. Monday at 512 N, Illinois st. Mrs. Mattie KE Resor will be in charge.
ton in visiting the various centers,
clothesline! A soft casual with a cool
set-in belt, puff sl
to the hemline. Y
«Second Floor
Caters to Sissy Ruffles For Size 7 to 13 Figures
14.95
The cutest trick in your
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ruffles everywhere.
down back from the neckline
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Wasson’s Junior ‘Shop, :
R
ly feminine U-neck, eeves and Buttons
ours
emember! Wasson’s
Closes 1 P. M. Saturday
(Open 9:30 A. M.)
