Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 19 July 1945 — Page 10

BONDS AD; “rove - ATTORNEY [ELS

Memory Turns (Continuéd From Page One)

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES ie omens 4810 VETERANS FILE

and police. details after Beeker had

~ — Howe lif

WARE BUYING POWER

Over 130,000 in County invest 10 Per Cent.

In Marion county more than 130,- - 000 persons are investing more than 10 per cent of their income in war bonds each month. Savings bonds | held by county men and women) total $138,638,000. . ‘ Eber M. Spence, state chairman _ of the payroll savings division - of the Indiana war finance committee, | speaking to the Indianapolis Lions |

for allowances during a period off * - 4

—e : | unemployment, the veteran must be! el : : SAFETY 14 wt ra EE TN /

{able ‘to work and available for suit-| "begn demoted, : “for Her Hy

FOR JOBLESS FUNDS 2: work ‘when he files his first Rosenberg alleged that Mrs. Petit. : [claim A self-employed veteran must had asked him to prepare legal Veterans of World War" II have | Nave been fully engaged in self-

“«* . : “ Out to Be Nazi | prison commitment. ‘He was still over the sheriff's duties.” He said allowances, payable under the G. [| covered by the claim,” Mr. Shaw! lout of ‘town today. (he told her: this’ was impossible pill of rights, since Sept. 16 1944 .| Poinjed out, NEW YORK, July 19 (U. P).— | Mrs. Petit said he’s “on business because the slhreriff is an alected | Noble R.-Shaw, director of the Em- | a ee mePurgees | Karl Horst Max Wacker ®as held jin: Michigan CY. She iy She official. : |ployment Security division said to- GAS STATION ROBBED at Ellis Island today, stripped of |. | Told of this statement, Mrs. Petit day. # : : OF CASH AND COUPONS | with him lexclaimed: “Mr, Rosenbéfg is a i y his pose as Pvt. William Walker, R ber id he was aware of : * | In the week ending July 17, the >" amesl Sire j WLI ties” at th al .» I assisted my husband in|division office has received 174" vet vation coupons for 400 gallons Ji { an amnesia stricken American‘ /certain “irregu ari jes” a d e 4 |any way I could and as any good erans’ applications, 145 from ex- 8asoline and $125 ir ‘cash were} hero who took part in the Nor- |in the matter of summoning bonds-|wite should do. 1 don't think the army men, 25 fr , eas : t men¥and lawyers for prisoners. He | caxpayers ‘would obiect to that. ) n, rom navy dischargees taken from the filling station al mandy landings and later fought lasserted that ‘favoritism® was) yers J rir and five from Marine corps veterans, south and Meridian sts, last night | with the Russians in Berlin: {shown certain bondsmen and law-| She also asserted that the sheriff's the director explained. The bubble burst yesterday |vers. but that “others wouldn't: play office and jail “are now operated | He added. that two types of claims : he FBI disclosed that “Pvt. |along.” better than they ever have Been in can be filed by eligible veterans. One | Ported. Wael the I Sab ol S Does ‘Conscientious Job’ the past.” type includes claims for total un-| Mr. Meyers said the bandit drove y 1 J > ot ir | i i» * ‘ ot 4 3 William Walker face Rosenberg’s blast appeared to be employment or partial ¢gmployment. into the station about 11:30-p. m Wacker, who was deported from ¢

He said jail inmates ‘write the and. th x names of preferred bondsmen on another development in a week-old | e. other is for self-employ- ordered 10 gallons of gasoline and ( ment, [then drew a gun on him as he was

papers “giving. her the right to take made 4810 claims for readjustment employment throughout the year

Arthur Meyers, night manager, re-

was

club yesterday. said the amount”is a “backlog of war bond dollars that

means every person in the county) ap-| | publicity

Stripes recounted his adventures

Owns an average of $300, or proximately $1200 per family.”

Stakes in Country

| “And every cent of this money |

is ready to go into local trade-chan-

nels when the war ends and for]

years afterward,” the official pointed

out.

Mr, Spence reported that meg

and women in the armed forces $956,000 |

from this county bought in bonds during the recent seventh! war loan. | “War financing has been a practical plan of financing the war. It has been flexible—permitting the highest income earners to share on an equitable basis,” Mr. Spence said. | “It has given the people a stake in their country and at the same time ‘they have been urged to buy bonds, tliey have been urged to sup‘port the whole war effort,” he stated.

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| fired at the burglary suspect.

this country in 1944 as a danger-

ous enemy alien | » ” quite a bit of |

and

L 3 : " WACKER got

as a hero. Stars

and he told his “experiences” over |

a nation-wide radio. broadcast from Boston. | The 20-year-old Wacker said | ‘he was wounded in Normandy and captured by the Germans. He | told of lving in a German hospital for three months, suffering

| from amnesia, unable to remems

ber even his identity.

He told of the brutalities of his}

felaimed

cards, which are placed in a box. anti-gambling flareup here in which “0 Jailer Otto Gasper takes out the the sheriff was ordered to clean up| In order to be deemed eligible|getting change. cards and calls the bondsmen.” | the county by State Police Super-| - a ——————— Mrs. Petit said Jailer Gasper | intendent Austin Killian, | ‘does a conscientious job” of sum-| Later, city police "applied the| moning bondsmen ‘and lawyers. | “Heat” also. Many charges and | “The sheriff absolutely will not!counter-charges followed. Mitchell| . allow prisoners to be imposed upon and Ralph Hitch, a bondsman, Complete Selection of by attorneys, bondsmen or anyone clashed in a fist fight on Bonds- |

else,” she declared | PICTURE FRAMES

man’s row in front of police ji Folding Frames . . . Wood Frames

“Where Photography Is Not a Sideline.”

Rosenberg said he thought Ralph quarters. Leather Frames . . . All Good Values! Hitch and Mary joi got most of | : the bail pond busiless at the jail. | ALL Sizes! ALL PRICES! The sherifl's ex-attorney also as-| serted that “Petit and Mitchell wood ashes as fertilizers varies full credit for ousting greatly because the ashes of various

former Police Chief Beeker.” {woods contain different amounts of He said the sheriff and Mitchell ‘potash, phosphorus and lime.

ASH VALUE VARIES WASHINGTON—The value of]

|i

STORE HOURS:

Sturdy brown calf service oxford with the steel safety box. Meets all the factory requirements along with good fitting and long wearing. Sizes to 9s, widths A to C.

(Parking Space Usually Close By)

318-332 MASS. AVE.

9 to 5, Except Saturday, 9 to 6

Nazi guards in a-prison camp. " ” » THEN the. Russians liberated him, he said, and invited Him to’ join one of their outfits. He became, he said, “a G. I. cossack.” He described his killing of three “Krauts” in a Berlin cemetery, Bunk said the F. B. I Wacker came to American of» ficers at the Templehof airport in Berlin last May 9 and told of his loss of memory and. of being captured by the Germans in Normandy on D-day. » ”, o HE WAS flown te a hospital in Paris in a special plane and later was taken to Cherbourg for treatment. Then he was shipped to the United States aboard the 8 8. Wakefield. He was at Camp Miles Standish in Boston for a while and on June 19 was transferred to Camp Upton, N. Y,

, where investigators arrested him

last Monday. E. E. Conroy, special agent of the New York office of the FBI, would not--disclose how. Wacker was discovered, but it was believed that his nickname “Dumbo” had something to do with it. Conroy said Wacker formerly | lived here with his parents. 2 # nn AFTER a time in an internment camp they. were sent back to Germany on the Gripsholm in February, 1944, Back in Germany, Wacker was

enrolled in a special espionage !

school, Conroy said. He received

instruction in various espionage |

tricks and flying, but later was

dismissed from the. school for |

“inefficiency.” v He was living in Berlin when

I theweity tell: LE { Wacker: is being held at Ellis |

Island until. authorities. decide

what charges are .to be placed |

against -him.

SLAYING OF DEPUTY

RULED ACCIDENTAL

MARION, Ind. July 19 (U. P.).— Raymond Smith, 50, Grant county jail: turnkey and deputy sheriff, was back on the job today after. Coroner B. C. Dale ruled that the fatal shooting of Deputy. Sheriff Burke Williams, 37. was accidental. Smith fired a shot that killed

{ Williams as the two deputies at- | tempted to arrest Clarence Tucker, | 35, ex-convict, | a series of county burglaries Tues-

in connection with

day, Tucker made a move to break while being handcuffed, Smith told Dale, and the deputy The shot struck

missed Tucker and

{ Williams in the head.

FRIDAY

AND

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5-DIAMOND

Engagement Ring

$330

BIG SAVINGS During Our Great

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a ER I

STORE WID

~4nd early Tomorrow Morning! : , ALL WOMEN'S and CHILDREN’S NON-RATIONED

SUMMER SHOES - REDUCED 33i%

“of {,arge Group Consisting of“ Ea

791 PAIRS

That Regularly Sold at $2.29 Now Go at . . +

217 Women's ‘SHORTS

Regularly Priced at RR ST.19--NOW

Pair

202 PAIRS, were $1.95, now

228 PAIRS, were $2.95, now

183 PAIRS, were $3.29, now

180 PAIRS, were $3.98, now

Pr., $1.33 Pr., $1.97 Pr.,, $2.20 Pr., $2.66

(34 Women's $1.89 SHORTS, row 98¢

19 Women’s $1.69 SHORTS, now 77¢

104 Women's $1.98 Shorts, now $1.29

(NO STAMP REQUIRED)

_PLAY SUITS.

WOMEN'S PLAY SUITS GO AT 1 REDUCTION!

131 Women's

Regular $2.85

a

$2.39 $249 $9.59

Regular $3.49 SUITS, Now

$3.69 Now

3 Regular SUITS,

$3.89 Now

Regular SUITS,

$4.98 Now

Regular SUITS,

‘BOYS’ WEAR Reduced

FOR QUICK CLEARANCE!

900 Boys’ $1.00 SPORT SHIRTS ... 77¢ 182 Boys’ $1.49 JUMPERS now 97¢ 174 Boys’ $1.49 Shorty Pants ... $1.29 216 Boys’ $1.69 Skorty Pants ... $1.33 420 Boys’ $2.69 Sport SHIRTS ,... $1.98

MEN'S 49¢ WHITE BELTS

Reduced to

250 Men's 50c Farmer STRAW HATS

Reduced to:

| 25. Ea.

Large Group . ..

BOYS’ 10c WASH TIES

Choice While They Last . , .

C

Women’s Skirts

GO AT UNUSUAL REDUCTIONS!

{12 Women’s $1.65 SKIRTS, now $1.19 {0 Women's $2.98 SKIRTS, now $1.98 84 Women’s $3.98 SKIRTS, now $2.77

All Kiddies BATHING SUITS and TRUNKS REDUCED 1/3!

172 Women's 65¢ Bathing Caps, now 44c 21 Women’s 83c Bathing Bags, now 59¢

2300 Prs. Kiddies’ Training Panties, Were 48¢

Jr $1.00

276 KIDDIES $1.98 SLACK SUITS

Reduced to

51.39

345 KIDDIES’ $1.00 SUN SUITS

Reduced for Quick Clearance to .

129 Kiddies’ $1.39 SUN SUITS, now

198 Women’s Sheer APRONS

Regular $1.00 Qualities Choice of Colors

5000 Pairs WOMEN’S ANKLETS

25°

PAIRS FOR

Were 20¢ the Pair, NOW

15 Kiddies’ $1.89 SUN SUITS, now

11 METAL LUNCH BOXES

KIDDIES’ BONNETS AND GAPS REDUGED

300 LITTLE GIRLS’ PINAFORES

WOMEN'S SUMMER ~ HANDBAGS

» .

The Ess hit by two after the fir where bomb

337 ¢

WASHING hundred and fighting men when two J: crashed into

; Ticonderoga ‘this year al

flames, the n 144 D Of the cast

: missing, the |

ing that the carrier alrea and is back I The story c

‘ms saga of an

skipper, Com Kansas City,

.12 hours desp

The Ticone carrier task 1944. In her planes sank stroyers, four other craft a

“aged 207 enen

On the mc Ticonderoga when a Jap | sun through

This stunning’ engagement ring w three handsome diamonds is an e tighally fine value Two, lovely cut diamonds .enhance- the beauty of the gorgeous center stone :

$125 a WEEK

After Usual Dowfi Payment

th

Were $1.00

86 Were $1.19, now $1.13, “NOW. . ..

Were $298 $9 9 174 Were $1.98, now °¢ Now... 2.19

us Tax

> ld

WOMEN'S DRESSES

Go at Unusual Reductions _ 97 Were $5.98, Reduced to____$4.49 110 Were $7.98; Reduced to____$5.39 - 63 Were $9.95, Reduced to____$6.95 92 Were $6.98, Reduced to____$4.98

bee —

Were $1.98 1.39

NOW... ‘Women’s Halters Reduced

ies 2°

{4 Regular 25¢ HALTERS, now 24 Regular 35¢ HALTERS, now 8 Regular 69¢ HALTERS, now __.____49¢c ~ 41 Regular $1.70 HALTERS, now _._.$1.39

6 |

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al

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