Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 10 August 1945 — Page 10

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

PAGE 10 -

Hoosier — Liodlanort BUTLER AWARDS Killed in China, 2 Wounded DEGREES 10 71 -

An Indianapolis man was killed ‘in action in China ‘and two marines

have been wounded in the Pacific. ;

DEAD

Lt. James H. Baumgartner, broth- |

er of Mrs. Harriett Macy, Westbrook st., in China. WOUNDED - Marine Pvt. John E. Mitchell, 1201 Marlowe ave. on Okinawa. Marine Cpl. Roy Cloyd, 1017 Ss. Sheffield ave, on Iwo Jima,

DEAD—"" 1" *

2938

Lt. James: H. Baumgartner, broth- 3

er of Mrs. Harriett Macy, 2938 West~ brook st. air force pilot, was killed | July 7, in a plane crash in China. | In service three years, the 24-year-#fd officer had been overseas only four months and had earned | the bronze -star,~the air medal and the distinguished flying cross. He attended Butler university three years as a student in the accounting and law schools, where he was a member of Phi Delta Theta fraternity. A brother, Ens. Edmund Baumgartner, is stationed at Clinton, Okla, Other survivors include the wife, Mrs. Maxine Baumgartner; the mother, Mrs. Rose Baumgart-

Paul, all of Berne, | »

WOUNDED— Marine Pvt. John Emery Mitchell, husband of Mr¢. Lillian E. Mitchell, | 1201 Marlowe ave, was wounded |

June “26, on Okinawa but is Bow |

back on duty. Overseas three months, Pvt. chell, who is 25, was taking part in his first campaign when wounded. Before entering service nine| months ago he was employed at! the U. S. Rubber Co. He attended Technical high school. : Pvt. and Mrs, Mitchell have two] children, Thomas Edward, 4, and Robert Emery, 1. 2 s = Marine Cpl. Roy Cloyd, son of Mrs. Floe Cyphers, formerly of] 1017 S. Sheffield ave, was wounded | Feb. 19 on Iwo Jima. Overseas since December, 1943, he attended schools in Marrowbone, Ky., and entered the service Dec. 8, 1941,

HONORED—

In Italy, Pfc. George J. Altman, 740 Weghorst st., has been awarded, the meritorious service unit plague. = » » Thes silver star has been posthumously awarded Marine Lt. Philip E. Mendenhall, son of Mr. and Mrs. H. M. Mendenhall, 3762 Ruckle st, for gallantry en Peleliu, where he was killed last September while

{ Mit- |

Lt. James H, Baumgartner . . , killed in China.

order to care for wourided men of his platoon. » =n ” Sgt. Charles C. Wickett, husband | of Mrs. Geraldine Wickett, 1525 E.| {47th st, has received the bronze star for meritorious service in Italy, and received a promotion | rant officer junior grade. 8 8 8 Meritorious service unit have been awarded the’ Pfc, Francis J. McClintock, Maryland st, and Sgt.

units of 1019 E

taly.

en STATE— The names of the following {diana servicemen appear on day's official casualty lists: ARMY DEAD Pfc. Leslie E. Miller, Maj. Eugene H. Nirdlinger, Haute, ARMY WOUNDED William J. Reagan,

Into-

Holton; Terre

Pfc. Thorn-

town. ARMY MISSING Sgt. Charles R. Shuler, Wallace. NAVY DEAD Chief Radio Technician Roy William Brown, Terre Haute; Seaman |

1-c Alfred Wayne Gardner, Evans- |

ville; Machinist's Mate 3-¢ Edwin Gould, Peru. NAVY WOUNDED

Marine Sgt. Junior Brock, Jeffersonville; Marine Platoon Sgt. James Lewis Fields, Ft. Wayne; Marine Pvt. Don Lewis Glaser, South Bend; Marine Pfc. Claude Palice Hanmore, Rensselaer; Marine Cpl, Theodore Russell Nut-

Ulyssus Stites, Deputy; Marine Pvt. John Edward Waltke, Ft. Wayne; Signalman 2-¢ obert Joseph White, Petersburg; Marine Sgt. Robert Wilford Wood; Marine | Cpl. James Oneal Woodard, Dun-

to war- | plaques |

Kenneth H.!m;

7. Waterman, route 3, for service in | and S. ner, and two brothers, “Marcus and ih Waterman, route 3, for c | Mo

Marine Pfc. Edward Allen Bald-!

win, Frankfort; John |

ting, South Bend; Marine Pfc. Gus|

Snohrh Soeskes at Summer Exercises.

Butler university's.summer school

commencement was to be held to- | around the world from three

day, with 77 graduates and under- | eraduates scheduled for degrees. Of this number 49 were to receive bachelor's degrees, and 28 were to get graduate awards. : Virgil Stinebaugh, superintendent of Indianapolis schools, was to speak at the ceremonies in Sweeney chapel. President M. O. Ross was to present the degrees. Candidates for the B. A. degree lin the college ofg liberal arts and sciences were: James F Bashy

(8 Kappes, Nancy Stuckenbruck, a

Joenne M. Green, Philip Overstreet,” Ottie ary Alice Knox, all of E. Barnes, Canton, am A yarrigus, Brazii; Evelyn A { Or hdaui t. Ber , Va. and Burton PF,

| Moore, Chalme |

| Receive B. Mary Caryl Martin,

S. Degree Indianapolis,

{ was to receive the B. S. degree in| | letter was recorded at the other end/| One - army rebellion,

home economics.

.college of education.were: Harriet. V. Cheetam, Ruth E. Garver,

/. Rinsch, Mary L. Sears, aker, Josephine PF. Caldwell, othy F. Ulrich, all of Indianapolis, 1 Mer'a Combs, Noblespille, and | DeMott, Shelbyville. 3 degree candidates were Edith Griswold,” Peru; Mary M. Hamer John B. Lehman and Lucy T Lehman, both of Greensburg; Culver; Floyd W. Rhude, Crotfers~ | lle; Maude E. 8 1 Mary E. Smith | Ger Bidine Swar 1, all rt; Mar E. Swindeman | Don alda I “Tillett P ; Ail leen Scott Weiland, Kokomo Ti on; | 9ileen Kimene r I: New | Logansp M { Frances | Williams

and Dor and Ed Ma ry W.

Mi tchell;

Rochester;

was | VO's ‘station JUO—Japanese Union|

e250 words a

| Dai | Weed to bel | Dot 4 | Fr I: F

sel. Mathilda

iditional master's degrees in were: to be given Fl Tipton; n James M 1 Velva E. Sturgeon, £. Swinford. Lebanon ory Ne ha L Thom as, Kingman The g ate hool of religion was to d bachelor degree of divinity to Freder ick B. Dov e, Indianapolis, and Delno W. Brown, Vincennes.

LYNX IN COMEBACK CHEBOYGAN, Mich.

Anderson;

Sent by U. P. Listening Post

SAN FRANCISCO, Aug. 10 (U.|joint declaration which was issued | 'P.).—First, news that. Japan had at Potsdam .,." offered ‘to surrender was flashed to| Hackett immediately, let go a the world today by the United Press | shout that could be heard half ways from its trans-Pacific listening post | down Market st. in ‘California's Moraga Valley. ' Wires Stopped The great news beat was relayed “Flash™ he yelled. , Every. tele-

| seven minutes ahead of other news|! type operator in the roomm came to services or the monitoring service, ‘attention. The - wires connecting of the federal communications com- | San Francisco to other bureaus and | mission, newspaper offices across the counThis 1s how: the news came In: gy stopped momentarily and, then

At 4:27 a. m. (6:27 a. m,, Indlan- | poo transmitting the words as

apolis time) or 8:27 p. m. Tove! Hacket cried them out: “Japs actime, the Morse dot-dash of Dome | cept Potsdam declaration!”

news agency's regular 4 a. m. broad-| ye United Press trans - Pacific cagt started a new item, monitoring' station in the Moraga William Wells, Morse telegrapher, Valley has been ' copying Tokyo was copying letter for letter a8 the| proadcasts for 15 years. The fertile Domej transmission progressed. But | valley, opening as it does toward he was not copying on a typewriter.| Japan, is considered the best locaHe was punching out the letters on| tion in the country for ne the the keyboard of a teletype machine, Tokyo signal. at the Moraga listening post. There, through peace and war, By Teletype Machine | the United Press ‘has recorded news

To receive the B. S. degree in the Press news room in the Daily News on Tokyo, Tojo's resignation and

r, Vernice 8. Jackson, Le-| Anne Morgan, Valeria E Domei signal had become standard ahead with the first reports of the

i

Florence | ment today addressed the following

of Logans- |

* atomic bomb.

ruger, overnight editor Hennen Hackett | 3 | Phinips. a John | watched the teletype in the San! 1 Curran,

Al E.| through , dispatch,

E he ¢ 1stan Alts Ceeler, Sister Mary Carl Mueller | words began to come indicating that h A. Wilson, all of Indian-|¢p Japs were making an offer to charges on the basis of their ages.

science | give up. to Harvey H. Davidson, | ) H

(U. Py—!

{ The Canadian lynx, at one time!

| believed tQ be extinct in the upper and lower Michigan peninsula, has | been reappearing in iselated sec- | | tions near Cheboygan.

exposing himself to enemy fire in

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Each timé he struck a key the Of assassinations, cabinet shakeups, Japan's early | of the teletype, circuit in the United | military successes, Doolittle’s raid

First News of Japan's Offer |

|couritless other big news beats. Only this week Moraga was far|

building in San Francisco. This instantaneous relay of the |

| | pPactice at Moraga during the cli- | Russian attack on the Japs by mactic phases of the Pacific war. [monitoring Soviet Far Edstern- staThe new Domei. item began -in- tions at Khabarosk and - Komso- | auspiciously. molsk

os oa TEN INDIANAPOLIS

Japanese govern-

{communication to. the Swiss and Swedish governments . . {

It sounded like just another rou- | » oe tine propaganda broadcast protest- |

ing against American use of the| Ten more Indianapolis men re

Nine Minutes Long

. ter WwW As the story continued from Tok- erbury ednesday on'a basis of

| point scores. They are:

Pvt, Thomas N, Cole Sr, Pj. William L.

Ocean—at the slow minute,

speed of only

1935 Highland United Press| pl. 2

Kephart, 1115 Daw-| nician 5th Gr, Denford O.! Norwaldo ave.; 8. Sgt. John | 1122 8. East st; Gr. Arthur N. Crafton, | Francisco bureau. {st.; Pfc. Paul W. Matthews,

okyo was more th { st. Tokyo m than half way| 8. Sgt. Frank W. Mason, 432 Kauffman the more than 220- word | kL: > Sgt. George Ardelean Jr. 4009 W, | as ngton st.; S. Sgt. Stanley’ Her r} which took almost nine | sues College ave, and S. Sgt. Ralph N minutes to transmit, before the | Gentry, Route 14, Box 318 . | Three local men received dis-!

1220 Kelly 1534 Sheldon

They are:

Pfc. Isreal C. Roberts, Technician 5th Gr. Carl E Bradley, N. Delaware st., i

“Ww The key sentence came laboriously | st - I VW. 1h 2944

over the wire— and Pfc. Luther E . Croce, Frederick hotel. ‘The Japanese government are| One officer, 1st It. William J. Cougherty,

kV 1823 Montcalm st., w t 1 {ready to "ceepl, the terms’ of the He to inactive Ha in Mg cid

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CONTIGE POUNDING JAP SUPPLY LINES

MANILA, Aug. 10 (U. P).—Far Eastern airforce planes entered tHeir sixth day of continuous as-: sault against Japanese supply lines in Asiatic waters today, after destroying or damaging more than 60 enemy ships during the past 24 hours. Gen. Douglas MacArthur's communique said the attacks ranged from Korea to Malaya and The Netherlands. East Indies. Seven 13th airforce P-38's scored near-misses on a Japanese destroyer in harbor at Soerabaja, in Java. An oil slick formed on the water, and pilots reported smoke pouring from the warship. From OKinawa more than, 250 7th airforce bombers and fighters attacked vital northern Kyushu targets Qn Wednesday, , Shooting down no fewer than 10 “Japanese fighters which attempted to intercept them. For. the. second straight day, bombers also hit Tsuiki airdrome in northern Kyushu.

oT.

Organizations

American Woods -com-

Tillman Harpole post 249, Legion, has elected Floyd | mander for the year 1946. Other officers | elected include Victor Banks, first vice commander: William ‘Porten, second vice commader; Van Meter Partott, adjutant John Beatty, finance officer,” Samuel Swarcey, chaplain, and Jgseph Scott, eant-at-ar

serThe ladies auxiliary of the Fraternal {9rees of Eagles, 211, will hold a card arty at 8:15 o'clock tonight in the Eagle Ball, 43 W. Vermont st uk Clara O'Keefe, Mrs. Helen Jepsen a Mrs. Nel je Shaw are in charge.

JEWEL FIRM SUES

RUTH CHATTERTON LOS ANGELES, Aug. 10 (U, P) —Actress Ruth Chatterton's Beverly Hills, Cal, home and furnishings today were: under a writ of attachment obtained by a New York Jewelry fifm suing -for $2423 allegedly due on a diamond - ruby ring and clip. , The superior court] writ was obtained by Shreve & Co. a ¥ j

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T. W. Bennett circle, 23, Ladies of the G.AR., will ¢eelebrate its 45th anniversary at ‘a luncheon at 12:30 p. m. Thursday at 512 N. Illinois st, Mrs, will preside.

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