Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 6 July 1945 — Page 2
PAGE. 2 ok a
By NAT A. BARROW Ss Times Fareign Corsespondent ; BERLIN, July 6-<In the foul |
company of a Berlin fraulein. their broad, Busky
in our zone—must work. There They are actually bringing their (~directed traffic with the |
shouldersiis no exception except for illness.
zest and
ET —
Sea Scouts to Train on , Brig
HINT TRUMAN T0 SEE CHURCHILL
Pre<Conference Meeting France Is Rumored. |
By HENRY P. MeNULTY | United Press Staff Correspondent ! HENDAYE, France, July 6.—This’ flag-bedecked Basque was .-doubly excited by the expected arrival’ of Prime Minister Churchill "
Next Month.
By LYLE C. WILSON | United Press Staff Correspondent | WASHINGTON, July 6.—Fur the: |
cabinet changes were foreseen here |
town > |
nouncement that Secretary: of]
today and rumors that he soon Treasury Henry Morgenthau Jr., had | would be joined here by President 2 resigned. | “Truman, | ae The resighation was made public | “Churchill was expected to reach lin an exchange between the two here this afternoon and go to {men of letters containing the custo- | Bordaberry castle—the huge, com-| s {mary compliments — even more |
fortable villa owned ‘by his friend, Gen. Grutinel. He will spend a %rief vacation there before the Big Three Berlin meeting. | There was no confirmation of re- | ports that President Trunian would | stop here on his way to Berlin, but they were rife both "here and in| Madrid, according to telephone re- | ports from there. Police Guard Route It also was rumored’ that Gen.
{lengthy than usual, Political Wash- | | i . |ington was skeptical of the show of contentment, | Morgenthau will remain in office until Mr. Truman returns in August from the Big Three conference | near. Berlin, The President has a _{suecessor in mind, and will an{nounece his identity at that time, Mentioned For Job Among those mentioned for the | Jiniminent vacancy were:
“Port Optimist . . . where Sea Scoufs will board this handsome, | John W, Snyder, of Missourt, fed-
Charles DeGaulle would - joint! land-locked brig. Construction of the stationary hoat began yester- leral loan administrator: Walter J | _Churchill and Mr. Truman. for| day on White river, across from the naval armory at 30th st. The 'Cummings, of Illinois, board chair- | talks here. That was scotctied by| land was leased to the Optimist club by the park beard, which sug- {man of the Continental and Illinois |
authoritative quarters in-Paris. The police took special precau- | “Sons here as the hour of Church- | ill's arrival neared. The highway - between Hendaye and St. Jesh 3 Luz already was heavily patrol .but now it was necessary to Tee special permission to circulate in
gested the marine architecture. Art Lindberg, park beard planning ‘ang i} sonsiruetion Sufjleriniendent, made the drawing.
Bank & Trust Co. and Fred M. Vin- | | son, of Kentueky, direetor of the of -| fice of war mobilizatidh and reconversion. Four members of the holdover | Roosevelt eabinet remain.
PRISONERS OF WAR |'Moon Eclipse’ Jap
L. Ickes is the last survivor of he
the area. SOMEWHERE IN THE PA- [original Roosevelt cabinet which . Three new officers in the Pact. Everybody stepped work for the piconerg of War society were CIFIC, July 6 (U. P.)--When [took office on March 4, 1938. .Decasion, French, British and | The others are Secretary of War |
the lookout on destroyer shouted recently, he wasn’t just nature.
The destroyer and two others were under attack by 10 to 12
the bridge of a “moon eclipse!” admiring
(named last night by Mrs. A. E. Mc- - American flags hung . from every = ne rs i
building. Excitement already wa | COTReIL president, “high, but it doubled when the Tru- | They are Mrs. Jeanette Atha, 1702] nan rimors went the rounds of {Montcalm st., secretary; Mis. Howthe streets and cafes. tard J. Massey, R. R. 13, Box 245, treasurer, and Mrs, Mary Secamman, Near Spanish Frontier 234 Ohmer ave, in charge of regis-
{Henry L. Stimson, Secretary of {Navy James V. Forrestal, both of |Néw York, and Secretary of Com{merce Henry A. Wallace, of Iowa. {Only Wallace's job is deemed to be secure under all forseeable circum-
At Bordaberry castle, in the|tration. enemy planes, and the way they |Stances. _fown's outskirts on the road to St.| Retiring officers are Mrs. Ralph| Were silhouetted by a brilliant _./. on ON Jeb Jean de Luz, scores of techni-|Rumbeld, secretary; Mrs. Collin B.| moon made them perfect targets. | Ickes is the most restless of the -gians weré busy rigging telephone | Whitehurst Sr. treasurer, and Mrs.| At the height of the raid, the (four holdovers. . The self-styled Wires and radio antennae. The|Willlam Gochenour, eclipse came. ‘Old Curmudgeon” was understood
in charge of
.yilla is just a little over four miles registration. ; “Keep firing. They can't see [tO feel—at least prior to yesterday . from the Spanish frontier, Mrs. McConnell and Mrs. Walter] you, but they can feel you,” one |afternoon—that Mr. Truman hed The castle's 14 rooms recently Strong, vice president, will continug destroyer skipper, Cmdr. A. E. |hot. made it sufficiently clear he were redone. to prepare for the in their present positions. Teall, San Francisco, Cal, told (Wanted him to remain in the prime minister's coming. In 1040 it| Conditions and locations eof] his gunners. cabinet. . was the local headquarters for Ger- (prisoner of war eamps in Japan and| A few moments later two That feeling may be relieved
man 8, 8. troops. Later it was the in the Philippines were discussed residence of the German general | last night by Mrs. Lester E. More- | +gommand in. this region {land -8r., prisoner of war consultant ,. While the Germans were using for the Indianapolis Red Cross .his house, Grutinel was busy fight- chapter. Banner temple, 37, Pythian Sising them as an underground leader| Lettérs and cards: received hy] ters, will hold initiation services at | known to other resistance mem-|relatives of the prisoners were read! 8 p. m, Monday at 5420': E. Wash- |} Wealthy and reportedly of a bers as “Marcus.” by members. | ington st. State of mind in which he would k about as soon leave the eabinet as {remain in it. Under those circum|stances, Ickes may take ~ himself out after his oil assignment is completed. Forrestal May Stay
Stimson at 77 years and with the {European war ended, might desire |to retire at any time. * Forrestal is 53 and apparently more likely to remain through to the end of the war in the Pacific. Wallace is safely seated in the cabinet where he has a certain \responsibility to Mr. Truman and {can be kept under the eye of the
| Hannegan regulars.
somewhat by:the President's statement yesterday that he was sending Ickes to London to renegotiate an Anglo-American treaty dealing {with oil in the Middle East.
enemy planes splashed into the ocean.
INITIATION SERVICES
INDIANA FUR CO.
have his job as long ‘as he wants (it. He would be much Jess an |obstacle to Mr. Truman's renomination inside the cabinet than out, Morgenthau will leave the treasury after heading. it since Nov, 17, 1933, when he was ndmed under- ) | secretary and acting secretary upon #3 |the death of the late Willlam H. Woodin,- the original treasury secretary in the first Roosevélt' cab- | inet. Prior to that Morgenthau had held minor positions under Mr. | Roosevelt when the latter was govhg of New of New York,
2% RELEASED AT CAMP ATTERBURY
Twenty-five
YOUR OLD FUR COAT
Furriers with a lifetime of experience will transform your
more Indianapolis veterans have been teleased from the army through the Camp Atterbury separation center. One soldier was over the age limit, four officers were placed on inactive status and 20 other soldiers’ were discharged under-the point system. Technical 4th Gr-Mikael Sedaris,
FUR«COATS
fO-POINT PLAN —
precious furs, as if by magic, Cleaning 1025 N. King ave, was. released ; : Si under the age regulation. Placed into a glorious new 1946 creation. Glazing Eon inactive duty were: MA LR EL pre-summer rates Electrifying 4 First Lt. Pred C. Kircher, 5618 N. Dela : ¢ h |ware st; Capt. William T. Conner, 836 & PPI: NTs Demothizing 63d st; 2d Lt. Paul A Cappadony, Ft | Baris oh, and Maj. Theodore H. Davis,
New Loops -/ 31 N. Meridian st.
Point dischargees included: Pfc. John' J, Little, 1862 Milburn. st; |Pfe. George L. Lamb, 626 Dorman st: 8 Bet. Wilbert “A, Cunningham, R. R. 15, | Box 709: Pvt, Vimeent 8. Whicker. 950 N {Oxford st: Pvt. Victor E.° Walter, 1427 ~| Williams st: Pfe. Bdward D. Kellett, 523 y Merrill gt.: 8. Sgt. Gayle R. Harding, 3920 Sufherland ave, «and.T, 4th Gr, Ray{mond M. Case, 417% Davidson st | 8S. Sgt. Loren T. Miles. 1622° W, Wil- | COX "BL.; Pvt Herman Andrew, 913 Hos- | [brook st. Cpl, Harold R. Conkle. 1712 |Sarraliton ave. Sgt. William A. Boyle, N, Belle Vieni pl.; T. 5th Gr. John R, a 2915 Brookside ave.; Cpl Carl K.T | Wagner, 1013 8. Séhate ave.: |E. Spaulding, R. R. 45, Box 749: 8. qt {Oval V. Todd, 608 Rochester ave: Sgt | {John A. Caekalski, 307 N. Rurat oN i . Robert R. Riley, 3467 Salem st Gr. -Earl D. Phelps, 926. Highlaid
ave. and Sgt. “John H. Steuber, ie an r 35 w
Check Itching
New Ties . New Buttons Rattan Beating , > Minor Repairs Collar Stiffening
gw
YOUR FURS
TEL IT ault in tas
|
aL
352
“Agonizing ttching of ugly eczema,
Iteh is checked on ONE APPLI
CATION of BLUR STAR OINTMENT.
“THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
uss Achieve Regimented Discipline In ne Torlin? Women Clear Debris
own Russian food supplies into" | snap of girl drum majors. “In ‘the factories—already re= " Fubble of what was once a great | Berlin. And they ‘are keeping all | Their broad smiles and brisk | opened—they must work to keep Bity, the Russians somehow have |. their German prisoners inside | salutes for -passing American—-or essential supplies moving. Janaged to evolve a kind of regi- | Russia. British® jeeps—and the warm “In factories partially intact, a erited order for the congllered Russian officers .sat down with friendliness of the Riissian -offi- | they must help ‘to get the ma- | srliriers. | ‘me today ,and removed much of | cers at- headquarters—were the | chinery wheels turning’ The Russians’ have solved the | the secrecy as to just what tire | only bright spots .amid the ter- “The winter will be hard here fraternization problems ~ simply | Russians have been doing. in ... rible shadows of a ruined city, | —for all.of us—and so they must They merely take mild disciplinary 4 their portion of - this grdtesque “Yes,” said one bemedalled of- | work.” y action only on the complaint of a | jumble of destruction ficer, picking his words carefully, | - Women bucket brigades, the German girl—or when a soldier or Outside, women soldiers of the | “Every man and women in Ber= Russians explained, are now reofficér is | found publicly in the Russian army- Tifles slung across | lin from 18 to 45 years of age— | moving rubble from the crumpled |
CHANGES SEEN
OFFICERS NAMED Fighters Downed be Secretary of Interior Oe 9 drivers.
Ickes is 71 years old, independent- |.
{ Largely for those reasons he can
Pfc: Richarg |... . .
- First Application|
Tétter, Ringworm, Pimples, Beabie Bcabjes, Toc
Repeat ac] ~
needed as nature helps heal. Money back |i FIRST
aryl today. Lo
buildings selected for emergency reconstruction,
We have seen many of these | bucket brigades along the end= |
less milés of utter ruin. Like the ruins of Berlin, these women ‘workers are bedraggled and incredibly somber. They pass bricks, pieces of timber, buckets of dust from hand to hand, - listlessly. And they eye our uniforms with faces both servile and arrogant, The Germans “are e. being _per-
~ IMORE CABINET Jap Industrialists May Try:
mitted to" run their own newspapers under rigid Russian supervision. The city government is in the hands of a German burgomaster and a-large flock of subordinates —all carefully checked for ' Nazi background. “We-allow them to run the city the way they watit—buf we keep
| | |
political parties are allowed to | Organize and have a free hand on a democratic -basis.
“There is no" question of any
election - here for a long. time, perhaps years. But we have | permitted the Germans in our
' zone to start four parties al- | ready. These are:
| a ‘watchful eye, with control of- |
| ficers beside them,” the Russiay | officers said. “No political trade unions are _ being encouraged,
|
To Halt War, Says Borer
SAN FRANCISCO, Jilly 6
military may comply,
of Lt. Gen. Holland M,
| Mad) Smith,
(U.
(Howling |
San Diego where he will
The 63-year-old general stopped P.).—Japaniese industrialists prob- |here en route from the Pacific to -
‘Morgenthau to Leave Post ably will try to halt the Pacific |
war when Japan's cities are bombed | out of “existence, and the enemy command of the marine training in the opinion | land replacement center. Smith said he did not believe fit| {would be necessary for American!
assume
|
Smith, relieved at his own request | forces te - invade the. China const,
as commander of the U. S.
from the Gilberts to Okinawa, said yesterday he betieved
‘the military |
is bound to be controlled by the!
industrialists.” The industrialists, he declared,
‘will try to stop the war when| | their cities are razed by American
planes.”
fleet | but declined to comment on a questoday after President Truman's .an- marine forces after leading them | tion of whether he thought it would |
|
be ‘necessary for the Americans to!
land in the Japanese homeland. “He sald it was anybody's guess
|
how long the Japanese would hold out and declined comment on Lt.
jen. Joseph W. Stillwell’s expressed | hope that the war would be ‘over
by next July 4.
CAB ISSUE DODGED, Kills Sweetheart CRITICS DECLARE| /n ‘Kidding’ Way
Ameriean Legion officials were! convinced; today that city councilmen were dodging the taxicab prob-
rem. Officials of the 11th district met
{last night to hear Republican Coun- | fcilman Ri C. why
[* mitted she
(Bud) Dauss explain | he led the move to kill’ a
| pending ordinance to license taxi- |
leab drivers. * The councilman failed to show up at the meeting.
wsa reported out of town. Legion officials have demanded |
He |
{action to correct abuses by taxicab |
AMARANTH INITIATION - Golden Link Court, 7, Order of
the Amaranth will hold initiation services at 7:46 p. m,, Wednesday in
ithe Woodman hall. Mrs. Frances Hamilton is royal matron, and John O. Henry, royal patron.
LOS ANGELES, July 6 (U. P)). —Pretty Rita Powers Clements,
27-year-old war worker who came
here from Detroit to marry her truck driver sweetheart, today ad-
“gun at him and shot him to death, police: said. As husky Thomas Gibbons, 3, lay dying in receiving hospital, officers said his final words were: “Well, I was acting smart and shot myself.”
Miss Clements told a different story.
Officers quoted her as‘saying she quarreled with Gibbons over "his clothes, and -he began biting her neck. “Stop or I might shoot you,” she warned him. She said she pointed the gun at Gibbons in jest and that it clicked on an empty chamber. - 8he led the trigger again; she added and the gun went off,
“I never dreamed it was londed, n
Miss Clements told police.*
“kiddingly" pointed a |
“The so-called Democratic party —a middle-of-the- road group before -Hitler’s day. “The Christian Democratic Union, another center - of = the - line group with Catholic support. “The Social Democrats of familiar pattern. “The Communists. “We will permit more parties so long as they are anti-Fascist and not nationalistic — after we have scrutinised and approved their
2 De
AYRES
FRIDAY, JULY 6, 1045
party platforms and programs.” Food and fuel are still - huge problems for the Russians... The Russian ration for Germans remains on a bare subsistence level “by necessity”—and certainly will get little better,
Heavy workers’ now get 600 grams (1'4, pounds) of bread daily,
and small amounts of potatoes, cheese and sugar,
blasted ruins, shattered beyond repair — broken hung, shot, electrocuted, drawn and quartered for his sins. But the Russians are managing by dint of rigid discipline to keep the zombies under their control shambling about and hard at - work,
WILL CLOSE TOMORROW
AT 1300 P. M.
and The Chicago Daily News,
Berlin is a horrible shambles of |
like ‘a criminal -
Copyright, 1045. by The Indianapolis Times In
‘a
«
Scie
’
By WAT
Director, |
WASHINGTO
German scientis working on a *'n consisting of sti to float 5000 m «from which dea cused on any Julés. Verne mu easily in his gra
For this tall
JAPS R
FOR
120 Miles Areas | «(Continued
1600-mile rounc
Jwo and Toky«
defended sky le A second fle and fighters | Nagasaki and northwestern K force of about at the Japane southern Kyusl! Navy | “Tokyo said tI warships that port of Sakhal of Okhotsk Th houfs later off miles -to the « the island hea Other unider ably of the Arr reported by T through the 8 where north of most of the Ja A United | Okinawa, mea that hard-bou was being con most powerful earth.
Massi Col. George for the U. 8.
more than 25 ways are bein tion on Okina a massive air scale similar tated German The smalles ing flelds, he handling twic the huge La New York Cit While the up, Australia eontinued the near to capt suburb of Pu biggest oil re East Indies ready held a and the Man to the east. Gen, Dougl munique said engaged in t during the m severely dam enemy shippi 45 enemy pla American f another 19 er and Thursday Off eastern 1 for 13 more.
‘ERNIE OPENS
(Continue
Pyle by Jo sented to Pre
« «of Indiana 1
mater. Walter Le Times, will original man corresponder United Life of a $10,525,
Proce:
Then the dimmed and will be prem to the Erni at I. U. Greeting the premie Gates, Lt. ( wood, May Bchricker, Booth Tark liam, Will ] coff, Edwir Smith, Kai Guthrie, M and Edwarc
GERMALI FOR HI
FT. DOU P.).—Two C today faced striking ‘tw Rupert, Ida The sente terday afte heard testi: Heinz Heil: refused to work form day. .. When or officers sal
(All Da
Sunrise Precipitation Total precip. Surplus sinc The follow temperatures p. m, yester tures for 13 today:
Atlants Boston
Chicago
Cincinnati .. Cleveland Denver - ... Evansville Ft. Wayne Indianapolis nsas Sit
