Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 13 July 1945 — Page 6

"PAGE 8

- To Ft. Harrison

Capt. Huesing Capt. Wiant

TABER ATTACK ON OWI FAILS

Both ‘Houses ore to give §

- FEPC $250,000. .

| York)

to slice in half the $35

Capt, Howard H. ‘Heusing, 4050 | 000,000 office of war information| Ruckle st., has been assigned as | appropriation. special service officer, 1530th serv- | Taber moved to send, back to jce command. unit, Ft. Harrison, |conference the war agencies appro | | priation bill for- 1946 which cares |

to assist Capt. W. A. McKinzie. A member of the 38th division, he is a veteran of. 29 months overseas. He is a graduate of Shortridge high school and Bute ler university. -He formerly was employed by the Northern Indiana Power Co. New army chaplain atgFt. Harrison is Capt. Howard J. Wiant, former Indianapolis resident. He is the son of Dr. Warren W,

Wiant, who built the North Meth | _odist church at 38th and Me-

ridian sts. He is a graduate of Shortridge | high school, Ohio Wesleyan and versity. He is a member of Beta Theta Pi and formerly was pastor of the Garfield Memorial | Methodist church in Cleveland. He has had 30 months service

overseas. | 3

ESSENCE OF TURPENTINE WASHINGTON.—Oil ©f turpentine is chiefly pinene, a ‘molecule composed of 10 atoms of carbon and

16 of hydrogen.

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Mex, Women! Old at

| for 17 ggencies, including OWI and |

Japs See N. Y.—As Prisoners 7

| WASHINGTON, July 13 (U. ral io B | The house today rejected, 140 to 58,! efforts of Rep. John Taber (R. ¥ { i

rs RRP

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

AIRLINES" PILOT | SAVES 19 LIVES

Plane and Army Bomber Collide 3000 Feet Up.

FLORENCE, §. C., July 13 (U.P). —A cool-héaded commercial pilot

a)

eo FR ahi ana: mee a Rha AR]

{was credited today with’saving the

{ lives of 19 of his 20 passengers,

His

| plane and an army bomber collided | | yester day 3000 feet in the air. One of the passengers, a 3-year-fold boy. and two of the bomber's|

crew. members boy's mother,

were killed.

Indiana university, | Boston uni- | $18, 000,000 of a recommended $35, |

| the Fair Employment | Committee.

| The bill ‘was deadlocked

from-|

Practices |

| June 8 until yesterday because of | southern Democratic opposition to | {the FEPC. The FEPC opponents]

{made no fight on the floor today | | after a warning that opposing the | no |

| conference report would have

| effect of FEPC funds.

Taber Attacks OWI

A $250,000 appropriation. for

FEPC was agreed on late yesterday |

| by both houses. ° Originally the house gave OWI | {000,000 appropriation, which the | senate amended to $39,000,000. he conference committee agreed | on $35,000,000, and Taber sought to | cut it back to $18,000,000.

| | |

“The operations of OWI and the}

fooled away . compel me tol object and oppose the conference | report,” Taber told the house. He said $10,000,000 would be adequate for all OWI functions. As approved by the house the measure carries approximately $768.500,000. Originally the house bill carried $752,000,000, which was increased to $771,000,000 by the senate, | {and set at $768,500,000 by the con- | | ference committee.

CZECH HERE LEARNS

HIS WIFE IS SAFE

word of his” wife's safesy . in | Czechoslovakia came today to Oscar |

| ridiculous waste and the enormous

amount of funds that have been |

| stern, Czechoslovakian refugee who |

{came to Indianapolis after escap-|

ing from a Nazi dungeon. Mr. Stern, who has addressed more than 180 local churches, local | civic clubs and high schools: de- | scribing Hitler's terrorism, plans to have Mrs, Stern join him here as |soon as is possible.

=

Hirashi Oshima,

| New York,

was injured seriously

| {She had not been told yet of her ! | son's death. The planes collided 20 miles from |

|

{ here.

The | Mrs. A. BE. Williams of |

Capt. G. D. Davis of Miami, |

| mn command of the Eastern Air| § | Lines Boston-to-Miami plane, sald |

| they were at 3000 feet to Columbia, 8. C.,

for the glide airport when

suddenly there was a grinding crash | jon the port side of the airliner.

Fuselage Sliced The army plane, apparently out

of Florence air base, sliced through | {the fuselage, ripped off one of the| | transports engines, and spun away |

lin a dizzy dive.

It crashed and

burned. '‘M h One of the army plane's crew Ww members parachuted to safety. Two | itsc er elcome others died in the wreckage. Their |

names were withheld cials

Army. offideclined to comment on the |

crash.

|held the crippled

Pilot Norman Martindale, Miami, ship aloft. long

| enough to drop it into a corn field |

Japanese ambassador to Germany, leads 32 mem-

bers of his staff from the navy transpogt, West Point, at New York

after a trip from Europe as prisoners, Reports say they may be used in exchanges for

fall of Germany.

They were captured after the

such Americans as Lt. Gen. Jonathan M. Wainwright, a Jap prisoner

since Corregidor fell.

Red Cross Holds Classes in Park

ONE OF a series of educational | programs conducted in city parks by the nutrition department of “the Indianapolis chapter of the | American Red Cross and the city recreation - department was held at Willard park today. Assisting in the summer series are the Girl Scouts and the Camp Fire girls.

3 LOCAL SOLDIERS: RELEASED ON POINTS

Three Indianapolis gen were dis- | | charged from service yesterday at| Camp Atterbury on point scores. | They are: S. Sgt. James R. Ramsey, | 641 Division st.; Sgt. Lawrence E. | Lazzelle Jr, R. R. 7, Box 346; and |S. Sgt. James A. Burgess, 1245. E. | Minnesota st. Two local men received diss

charges at Camp Atterbury on

for an emergency landing. "Both! Martindale and Davis said had no idea the fast twin-engined|

bomber was close to them.

port's crew was Stewardess P. B. Avani, Miami.

Sliver Remenibers

Marker for Mother

DENVER, July 13 (U, P).—A modest monument soon will be placed over the long-unmarked

they |

almost The other member of the trans-|

Miss |

| -vear-old car,

Is Honored for

-C. R. McCOTTER, president of the Grain Dealers National Mutual Fire Insurance Co, today was honored by officers, directors and employees for his completion of 40 years’ service with the” company. 3 Mr. McCotter, § who is the old- § est. employee in 3 the point of service, joined the firm July 13, 1905. After spending several years field representative in Mr: McCotter the Western states, he became manager of the company’s branch office in Kansas City and in 1013 was made joint manager of the Western department office in Omaha." From 1927 until coming to Indianapolis in 19042 as president of the organization, Mr. McCotter was in full charge of the company's Western department. In 1935 he was made vice president.

Home Folks Give

as

HILLSBORO, Wis, July 13 (U. P.).—Vice Adm, Marc A Mitscher leaves today for Washington, D. C., behind him a swift day and a night occupation which left his Hillsboro homefolk excitedly weary but happy. Mitscher, he whose carrier task force smashed the Japs east of the Philippines, came quietly— unheralded—back to his hometown yesterday. He and his wife, Frances, arrived from Coronadlo, Cal, in a muddy fourthe admiral at the wheel The townspeople knew he was coming, of course. But they didn't know exactly when. They quickly draped Hillsboro with flags and bunting, then turned

{ out to honor their returning hero. | It was the naval air expert's first

grave of Mrs. Nellie Potts, a last | visit here in 11 years.

tribute to the finer sentiments of her errant son, ‘Howard, described by authorities as the

Mrs. of 1941, shortly after Howard

| most “calloused” murderer ever to | i ‘die in the state's gas chamber,

Potts died in the summer

40 Years' Service

‘|enty-seven army nurses today were

77 NURSES. RECEIVE HEROISM AWARDS

MANILA, July 13 (U. P).—Sev-

awarded the bronze star for hero{sm in administering to American and allied civilian ‘ internees in Santo Tomas university while the building still was under fire, The nurses were attached to an advanced medical group which provided medical care for nearly 3700 civillans during - the battle of Manila. Lieut. Gen. W. D. Steyer, commander of the United States army forces in the Western Pacific, presented the medals.

FRIDAY, JULY 13, 1943

CONFIDENTIALLY = “ARE YOU A HAS-BEEN?

You: age may have nothing to do with That lack of drive, that run.down Jociing which makes work & burden and holds you back trom enjoying pleasurdvie activities with your family, maybe Nae ture's warning signal that you lack cere

it!

tain organic materials and vitamins vital

Thousands everywhere who discourage that TR

to everyone. suffered from this distressing, ng condition have discover

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Calcium, Phosphorous and cial value in such

Vitamin Bl, other ingredients of 8 cases, have discovered it ‘has given them new vim, new energy The tonic effect of TROMONE ‘may prove it ts the answer to that weak-tired out, “older than vou should be" feeling At Hook's Dependable Drug Stores and drug .storgs everywhere.

Brown-and-Whites are back!

The old standby — Brown and White Saddles with new No-Mark servisoles — Truly the all purpose shoe.

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uf’s

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STORE HOURS: 9 to 5:00, Except Saturday, 9 to 8

318-332 MASS. AVE.

Wednesday in accordance with regu- | lations releasirig men over 40. They | #are: “T. Sgt. Lester Jarrett, 806] Bates st. and Pfe. William-F. Hicks, 1542 Cruft st. Among the officers returned to in- | active status were: 1st Lt. Paul L| Aikin, 3949 Arthington blvd. as of! Aug.” 19. and 1st Lt. Frederick L.| Sorrells, 3261 Spann ave., as of Aug.!| 18.

(Sonny, Potts was charged with beating his wife to death because she had not coeked a promised chicken dinner. Warden Roy Best always had been consciencestricken because he had not erected a marker for his mother's grave and before his execution. had directed prison officials to purchase a monument.

The schedule of future park programs follows: July 18,-Rader and Udell; July 19, Finch and Keystone: July 20, Camp Sullivan; July. 25, George Washington, 46th and Arsenal; July 26, Belmont; July 27, Ellenberger; Aug. 1, Northwestern; Aug. 2, Hawthorne: Aug. 3, Garfield; Aug. 8, Highland; Aug. 9, Christian, and Aug. 10. Douglas.

> 40, 50, 60! Want Pep? CZECHS TO GET FRANK

Want to Feel Years Younger? LONDON, July 13 (U. P..—Ra- |

| dio Prague said today that AmerPocus: Sar a what Lia DepDg 15 MN | jcan military authorities have]

<i sll Scan lo 3 ro i | surrendered Karl Herman Frank, amin By, ealelum, phosphorus. 35¢ In. | former Nazi protector of Bohemia |

Try Ostrex Tonia . | w Tabiont Jot en ven. Jusitug S88 very 447. and Moravia, to Czechoslovakia for | "a ru stores everywhere—in n- : Fed i dianapolis, at all Hook's.and Haag Stores. trial as a traitor and war criminal.

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