Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 7 August 1945 — Page 3
G. 7, 194
K voespar” ave. as — THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
ont ‘OKY0 REPORTS (Why the Atom Goes Boom: NEW SURRENDER Vt, ous sioss WORLD DIPLOMACY |.2 rem i
by the United. Nations. That prob-
4 OMS BOMB DAMAGE] Othman Explains It Clearly| ORDER WEIGHED ot mie sito oc 13 JARED BY BOMB: ni om
ame this tres (Continued From Page One) this new force. light followed (Continued From Page one) State Mental hospital, believed the Were any one power or group of y the do EA tamin 2 Kin soit inside of & steam engine, instead of attack by another inmate. nibs in Nippon 9'yowers pisiies to pertect and be by 1 : . € wy - % xplosion, © Atomic Missile Exploded in| “L ao idm sol sxplite Atom Warning May Be. in| The vietm vas dscriea by ui However, the new weapon 1s more| junction. with tmproved. models. of expression of y ‘Air, J S The boysll work on that next; all théy've got so far is a Second Ultimatum authorities as a 58-year-old woman. epochal diplomatically, than it 18{ihe fiying bomb or rocket, it would Severs) un I; Japs say. ..package of very costly atoms that explode all over the place. : er The police said she was found on |militarily. hold the rest of the world at its Si SI cons vom rans | TRE oY Sn Re mee | om mmr on (05,20 J EI en ST : your water, runn yg u ) : : 0 . clubs on e of} 3 Rat by the caused in Hiroshima city as the » £8 8" target for the first atomic bomb. tt gn their bare hands, there have always _. Nations Must Agree result of an attack made by a small MY PROFESSOR said it probably would be years before the |The purpose of this may have been MINE KILLS 21 A been new Weapons to give one side| Had Germany, for example, perIv number of B-29s yesterday, Aug. 6. ~ scientists learn how to explode cheap atoms (they're the com- to avoid destruction of the Japas| WASHINGTON, Aug. 7 (U. P.)—|the advantage. fected the buzz-bomb and loaded it the room let “2. The enemy appears to have Pussted ones, drat it) and to keep ’emn under control like steam nese government, the appropriate Twenty-one men were killed and| This weapon — this foosing of | With this cataclysmic stuff in 1940, congratulating developed new type bombs ini this| in a locomotive. Some day, he said, theyll turn the trick. ciro¢ | surrender authority. A second mos four wounded when the 2100-ton atomic force, the basic power of the She Sous have ienuniasd the Jeo © sensed “this attack. However, details are now ; sin they do, a furnace not much bigger than a cigare A ve ma Tho boon to DIaY an Jape destroyer Lavallette struck a mine universe -- means that mankind|ples of the ea and forced them 4t might haps under investigation.” case should heat your house, may o pi Jap off Luzon last February, the navy must now quit: making war or be-|to pay tribute. a2 he In P “The first recorded Japanese refer- You'll feed the fire box with a teaspoon instead of a coal hese Betves by : rring a 9 tal revealed today. v come extinct. What, it is asked. is to keep any about it, or else. 0 the Rficgs ence to the bomb had come a half| scoop. I cee pac sa oy i hour earlier over the Tokyo radio. Atoms will run your automobile and you won't ever have to pi je prs k ue pawer, i ot RD he It was a routine dispatch on the| fill the tank. Se aya ga dela a 8 Wes announcement. of the atomic, bomb The manufacturer will put in enough fuel to last the life repo - wd oi Gist he To a. . " President Trum Primi 8 ‘ full grown ab Be Ep deal, TTunAL and PEEL OR A Ev» ’ oes the entire city of Hiroshima, ~How-\ STRAUSS SAYS———IT'S ONE DAY NEARER PEACH! eat new force The dispatch was beamed in Eng- AM s0 on. Anything that moves except your own feet, will |¥®% they thought it quite probable :
d or for evil that the one explosive charge may in that shelte : flon we a pin lala be proyelien by atomic et ff with atomic botsps, but | |PAYe Juined the towns Wal-Waging 1 with its nae The human race could kil 0 capacity for months to come.
e their lives to Bp 3 Val Belematical the jib body knows ii. And that fact, ftself, may prevent future The nation’s highest strategists, ould slays Japanese cabinet met today to dis- It's going to be a wonderful world. And if you think my meanwhile, hii Mo Brigid 2 cuss transportation of materials nuts, out your dictionary. w long pane professor and I are nuts, get out y given to think it over before more from China and other “internal and And read in the other columns of this paper what the | "0 lL "0 bombs are loosed foreign affairs.” These presumably] sojentists say: The same thing, but with bigger words. ee tom 5 i00se: included the atomic bombing raid. It leaves you speechless. p e = Had First Sample
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Heavy Industry
" They have had their first samHiroshima, objective of the raid, w C Io . ¥ F h : . *) 0 0 ple. President Truman indicated ; 2 lies 15 miles north of Kure on the oman qa P ain 0 renc that they now might be given time : l L Qa. ; Honshu coast of Japan's inland sea. ’ to reconsider their rejection of the
A port and a Rlop SOMmING lutions M aq u I S Ta | k S HH oa re To n / g Wh Potsdam surrender ultimatum.
Tokyo and Kyushu, Hiroshima was a Hgessstul best Bf ihe | slop | 1 I ke C-) the site of such important War| once commander of 180 Prench she declared, “depends entirely on|;.,. ¢ ig ar he plants as the Japan steel works, the, \qooround troops, Capt. Lucienne|the forthcoming elections.” While |s 3 as 3 y righ hood Osaks Machine Tool Co. and Mit-|ysorchand has been shot at more the government will undoubtedly be al. Decretals Ys sublshi heavy industrjes. : than most women have been talked composed of leftist elements, shel ... "yy" 1 i Te Its factories turned out arms, mu-|,. + That's why she always|thought it unlikely that the Com- ph ow a - was a - nitions, Diesel engines, ships, elec- carries two pictures with her. munists would completely dominate rea est pn eas. s awesome y | trical equipment $58 spall ItS| "The photographs display the rid-|the picture. 4 DN ack 5. die’ gems. v = 190 POpUlation Was as before had| 91%" tortired boifien of wo of her ) Communists Faction puts new meaning in the Potsdam been attacked, photographs should Slose computes am e Prenc “Active Communists in France are ultimatum issued July 26 by Mr. provide conclusive evidence of the 3 panee of ihe foremost Women only one faction of the whole left-| Truman, Prime Minister Churchill destructive force of the atomic Maquis in the underground moves ist movement,” said Capt. Marchand.|and Generalissimo Chiang Kai- 3 «0, bomb. t, Capt. Marchand speaks to- “There are socialists and Christian|shek. It was issued, Mr. Truman Specially trained air crews were Mth rg Columbia club st |Democrats as well. The assump-|explained, to give the enemy a expected to carry the new bombs ont iin of the National As- tion that any leftist government is{chance to surrender before the to Japan on future raids. No an-|C' i’. = a en utackurers and the|Communistic is a false one.” great new weapon was used.nouncement was made, however, re- Indiana Manufact ation. She said the resistance movement | NOW the Japanese have an idea garding the type of planes to be i urers assoc would present “a full slate of can-|What the ultimatum really means.
She's staying at the Severin hotel, # used in atomic bombing raids. “I carry those pictures just in didates.
One of the most difficult prob-| ex.| Known only by the name “Re- : | lems solved before the initial at ase 1 Sonia on . Fa, nee” in the French underground, STEEPLEJACK DIES tack yesterday was that of en- pane Pierre-Andre Weill. Capt. Marchand is still very much p abling the raiding plane to escape| Pree in the army. French maquis en- IN FA the terrific effect of the bomb's No Pity for Petain listments; she explained, are for the blast, “These photographs supply 8 duration and three months. And, Kill Within Four Miles qraphic reason why loyal Prench- |she added, the duration means the| Continued From Page One) . . lightest pity for end of the Japanese war, not the d af Informed sources at Pearl Harbor| Men have not the s 8 War, never uttered a soun ter the said the full development of the Petain,’ she added. ri European conflict. She's in it as! belt gave way. bomb would revolutionize warfare “With us,” she said, “it is not a|long as America is in it, she said.| Mr. Shoemaker and Albert Hudand eliminate some weapons now in matter of sympathy for an old man.| Capt. Marchand was honor guest| dleston, 66, of 507 E. Washington use. It is a matter of hatred for a per-|today at a luncheon given by the|st, had been awarded the contract These sources said the bomb was| Son Who ordered young Frenchmen France Forever, Indignapolis unit for outside repairs to the structure. understood to have the power fo tortured and shot. We place Petain of the Fighting French committee| Four years ago Mr. Shoemaker fell blind persons within a %ve-mile in the same category with Laval” |in the U. 8. Mr. Weill'is general} 0 feet from a smokestack at Coradius and to kill within four miles. Fate of the .French government,'secretary of the committee. lumbus, O., and as a result was The searing blast was said to fuse confined in a hospital nine months the earth into silicate-like forma-/ M St + anything with it on our proving | with a broken back. Previous to tions. an-on - ree ground I'm sure I don’t know |that, he-had fallen 50 feet from Navy sources suggested that the . anything about it. It is one of |a stack at a creamery in Martinsnew bomb would rip apart even the | S Afo m-Di y 4 4 y the best kept secrets of the war. | ville. His ribs were driven into his most tightly compartmented war- : I believe it should be put to its |lungs that time. ships now in use, while the water (Continued From Page One) fullest use for it should alsp be His father, John Shoemaker, also] concussions from a near-miss would | 5 a fine propaganda weapon. I feel |a steeplejack, ‘was similarly killed buckle plates and send most ships ' Never PeTTHE or seeing & | pretty sure that if the Japs had |in 1922 when he fell 100 feet at to the bottom. or Ae they. co o “be i hy it we would be scared.” the former G. & J. tire factory. Most fortifications now in use BO oy Thre .Mr. Shomaker is survived by his probably would collapse under even None expressed a thought of : wife, Mrs. Edith Shoemaker; two poy sous ts nr vs "No sore + set, of | DRIGONER ON STAND [feet Si. Sora ote pillboxes and blockhouses used by apolis would do, with the excep- 2519 Guilford ave, and Mrs. Lo-
the Japanese on Okinawa and Iwo AT COURT M raine Nichols, 1916 Lexington 3 ti f 14-year-old Technical s ave.; would have disintegrated. om aa piu oy - ARTIAL a brother, Harry Slioemaker, S. Joseph Don Combs, the youth, {Continued From Page-Oney |. *- i71vania st, also a steeplejack,
. and one granddaughter. Cyclist Ar r ested wile yes BS Nie aves citing a $100,000 riot in which Se he On Two Gharges would have happened to the bar he Slaeipinary barvacks COL. ROBERT KOENIG r . JLoninent mW he ki iy Bad guard and an Indianapolis fireman GETS 3 NEW POSTS }
tod stead of that steel tower out west? died. ‘Col. Robert P. Koenig, in civilian wrong side of the street today | yu oi it would have completely | OPening at Pt. Harrison yester-|life president of Ayrshire Collieries got Alfred Spencer Lahr, 22, of | 4. oneoeq with the rest of the |daY, the trial was halted tempo-|Corp., and chief of the solid fuels
916 Middle dr, Woodruff Place, town. rarily after James J. Johnson, 29,|section of Gen, Eisenhower’s staff . : arrested on two charges. “ of Atwood, Okla., one of the defend-|before the disbandment of 8. H. A ? Police Sgt. Alexander Dun- 1 feel that it can win: the war ts. rok A 4 3 woody. last year's nemesis of for us in a hurry if we-use it a |" a oke down during the pro-|E. F., has been appointed to three ~y 3 y lot.” he said. “But it sure would |Ceedings. new positions. |
fr te a viene ne wg | Led yan Y no Johnson, 1 solid fuels sect , 8. street at La Salle and Michigan hands. hSon, paralysed from ihe section of the U, 8, forces
a pont ou Mrs. Bonnie Jones, 15 S. Me- | Waist down ‘by bullet wounds re- in Europe, co-chairman of the com-
: ; J : | ceived during the riot, broke into |bined coal committee of the allied know how to ride a bicycle? ridian st., whose husband Is in {gape yesterday when a cannon was |Control commission for Germany, To this Lahr answered, “About | the navy, said: “I can't believe | g,04 at retreat outside the trial|and representative of the And. : ; ( EXCUSE IT as well as you do.” so little of this new explosive |... Mg general on the om onal ) )
Sgt. Dunwoody then cried out: | can do so much more damage Maj. Paul C. Pete anization “Don’t you know the laws?” than the biggest bombs in the a asked ih . Hon, medical ol org . ; 2
“Some of them,” was the reply. | world. But it is perfectly won-'|moved from the fort to the hospital| Marsh 30. and Charles Was _ The police sergeant reminded | derful. If only we could have {5 gayoid transporting Johnson back| 24, Chicago: Corlesslie Ore san. Lahr he was on the left side of | had it earlier in the war the |a354 forth between sessions ove and William H. OC TCE : We shouldn' . . the street. The cyclist declared: | whole thing might have been over | That and the motion of the de-| Sprouse, 25, Charleston, 8. © . NRE PRR vy, e shouldn't let the cooling influence of “q always ride on the left side of | by now.” Her only fear is thal |fense for a delay because of John-| The court martial Tis presided : Goodall Suits bring to mind such an old Ihe Joa facing traffic when I'm He Semy Hugh Siscover Some son's condition were denied. over by Lt. Col. James ‘H. Morris 9 . ng equally as destructive or | The oth f ; . ’ : . " PR in the clty nowt | ve er defendants were Willie| Pt. Hayes, O. and obvious song title as "The Good Old Summertime
said Sgt. Dunwoody. Miss Hazel McClintick, 1812 —but it just i Lahr was arrested on charges of | Hoyt ave.: “People have talked N N D | ANAPOL S . does us that. it gives you 4 disorderly conduct and riding a | for years about splitting Atoms but feeling of "strolling through the bicycle on the left side of the | I never realized that the day was EVENTS TODAY Edward Lee Smallwood, 520 N. East: Ruth
street. ‘ so close or that it even would Ellen White, 324 W, 31st shady lane," etc.
come. Undoubtedly it does ter- Olly. Somes sut_ championship dwns Chester H. Roberts. 1831 N. Capitol; Sedis 3 QUIT RATION BOARD rific destruction and if for no [Delia Sigma Kappa, a a . chap- Fred H. "Wilson, 2505 N. New Jersey: ‘ SOUTH BEND, Aug. 7 (U. P.).—| other reason should shorten the jor, Meet ig PH Rho Delta room, Bonnie Jean. Cornwell, 2505 N. New Goodall as you — and millions of others Resignation of three members from| war, But it sounds like some« [indianapolis ¥ Men's club, International, Charles Howard Dawson, U. 8. .
rr; the St. Joseph county ration board| thing out of a comic book or | luncheon, noon, Central Y. C. A. Virginia Belle Robinson, 128 E. Fad > know — is a famous name in the world of M sm G Scott Smith, RUchmond; Pauline Hollingswas confirmed yesterday by Chair-| men from Mars.” Cp Hotel 2 Gindacanal, worth, Richmond. ong: Palme -
man James F. Thornburg. Resign- Cpl. Frank Madritach, 436 N. Officers, Wives club, luncheon, noon, Hotel Pred Douglass 2871 Parker. Senate; Are Summer Wear — "Goodall" is the firm that makes ing members were. Lioyd Waterson. Temple st, is home on furlough wile, Toviet Tne 0.0, wy the celebrated "PALM BEACH" which is almost Arthur E. Smith Jr., and Arthur M.| He is based at an air force prov- EVENTS TOMORROW Bailey ooh ne Hn or Lee; Jane : @ teebrale wieh.u.4 , Russell Jr. All three gave increased | ing ground in Florida. “It -cer- 53
\ Elizabeth Bell, 5202 W, Morris. * li } 4 g! personal-—and business affairs 8s| tainly came as 8 distinct sur- | uemens Koif championship tewrna-| Ch ot ch oss N. ou aaTyyy; Yorn . : a household word, in the field of cooling te reasons for their action. prise to me,” he said. “If we did Indianapolis Concert band, concert, 8 p. m,, | Ronald Sutherlin Storm, Mooresville; Fay- : Brookside park etta Rose Hall, 2406 Lockburn. Vonnegut band, " concert, -|John Samuel Kass, 1039 N. Holmes: Mar-
. * : thorhe playgrounds, Belle go pl. Bay, Jaret Jape Phases, Jose Delawate. : : And in recon} years — Goodall has added Ear / y End of J ap War N ow Union Liver ‘Mutual Automobile Tnsur- |’ Wigs: Bh Tar dei Senate & : : SUNFROST, which is cool to the touch — -
ance Co., dinner, 7 p. m., Hotel Wash- |Clyde E. Spears, 2753 Rida; Betty Jane ington. Ho, 2021 W. New York.
"Within Reason "eH oward TRE at tem rer seen BIRTHS and SPRINGWEAVE, which is a soft, drapy : . noon, Hotel Washington: a a Ge Resi Ch fabric that resists wrinkles — (it's a textile (Continued From Page Ome), MARRIAGE LICENSES A! Qiyoiohn. Coco Botnet, oo somn | HET: miracle — no less).
for the final effort if Japan does not collapse before inva- | iii’ Morris” 1435 Kappes Pace; Duras! Yigmis Devine: Hugh, Mariljus, Mes
; i Chester Bradley Shuck, 2408 N. Gale; AC Methodist—Pred, M wi sion—is now unshakable. orence Inabella’ Brown, 1220 N. in a Saf Pre soel Conk; Willard,
This Salih to Hcaseenied by the lrowledge that Macs acl a. te cies cod ot. Soren aap SOT Soule Goodall not only weaves the fabrics — but
Arthur will never trade lives for time. irs Bier, S81 5. Washington: Thel- Thomas, Eleanor Poverty; Ansmonent : also tailors the suits — and does both the The fighting men know that he will never. btrike at |B era arvey, 020 Bates: Ola L.A Home — Malcolm, Ruth Ballard, 917 : A \ il : ith ’ Home Majgoln : efit of the Japanese homeland until the last ounce of necessary ‘Harvison Watson, 001 Cornel; Bethel Jet- Bernt ner Lovie Meboverr 03i : weaving and the tailoring with benefit
material is at hand—and that last detail necessary to vest I. A vot o3 8. Alabama; Norma] Mo*"e : vast resources and developed skills.
Cassetty, 842 8, tol. At SL. FW ois—H H .B., : hold American casualties to an irreducible minimum has Rita Davis. 110 Puryear: Sally scars- Bileen Mucy: Hugh, ida on ib .
brook, 135 Pu AC City— William, ‘Marjorie. Hatcher. , been periected, a Denbow. 10 arerock; Grace At Col on. Mareares Armano. The Men's Store — presents the Goodall Family — HE invasion force—already the greatest ever assem: ft IR a I eg or in the coolness and the air-conditioned T bled by any nation in histdry—is not yet completed to rE HE oh ve Hm: A Rov uti Look : comfort of the clothing floor — and surrounds the satisfaction of the commander. 4 Jenn. Harding. Jr B aavy: hesgntns : - DEA fittin : Its day-by-day bujlding up is continuing steadily and itn 05 wn. lon Re Addis Hart, M, at. civ parignt i ; ] . the sits with every facility in service and A ~ relentlessly. - Sop ore Riehl, 832 B. Miami; Hasel| malnutrition, Panay, d of ‘oor hig Equally relentless is he daily hammering at the Eon 2) Loulse esas Bo haem ttn : ; Tanta fiw Clothing Floor is the Third! Jap forces of resistance. harley Ag gM - wh . acho. dra. ; : ; : i A Na Topping all this is the infectious calmness and seren- |onver ies Waldo White, 3. ts Riley, en ra : dd RE iain James Lathrop Gavin, #6, st Methodist, : i : : kb oa Jackson Edwards, 537 1 ‘ Gill. 85, at 1438 W. Court, = Evans. 68 at 1014 Chadwick.
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of War Henry L. Stimson flew there
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RIDING his bicycle on the
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