Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 13 August 1945 — Page 8

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ge. oy TR AWDIANAPOUS TIES ere _ MONDAY, AUG. 18, 1945 . Insi Ma bd A : ‘® “TF. Ey i : Whig ; * o lel Ten] : Mopping Up Jap Guerrillas On Luzon Slow, Costly To Indiana Division) el os : ; The previous day, while 1st Lt. { a reputation as a wag through a | Lord and Gen. MacArthur permit. BOWIE nan PED Be ne ve pd ow; pane, tha: ao

4 J. HOWA * surance Co

2 ; i continued | of the 38th (Indiana) “infantry a SEY NE | a Se oi “mopping | division. ; Clarence Rabb of Vivian, La., was | happy aptitude for scaring corre- Presently we reached the firing | 8 Fun experience MARIKINA, Luzon (Delayed).— ‘| up.operations” in Luzon. This was Having fought its bloody - way poking the nose of his Piper Cub | cnondents, sald “We-e-e-1, sir, ef | point for Capt. Harry Messer's Hamed Jur Lah Audrey Jean, | go some fire. First, it wanted a | «a southpaw Picking up the pieces. following | the tedious and often agonizing | through Bataan and reduced | plane over the Bn aya the Jap misses his first shot, I |' cannon company, of the 151st in- | * smoke shell. .“Bang!™ went Juley | lefiehahded liberation of the Philippines is | process of rooting out and Killing | Corregidor and Fort Drum, the | dam, his eyes I Slighte Y | sure can. Ef he dont, then it | fantry regiment, this unit was to | A radio was bedded down | |v and half a minute later 8 he couldn't { not as easy as it sounds. | a scattered but stubborn force ‘of | 3gth was then pased on a hot | upon 2 fat little poc e of per- | won't matter none.” F | ois the day's. operations by snugly beneath & clump, of small Sy, a ol te dyer 3 8 od Little is left of Manila but | Japs holed in to the north and | and humid plain just below the haps 150 Japs. They Wore seine Melvin’s composure” is not a #providing artillery fire where | trees and had established a | plume of smoke rose gisied wh 2 __ monstrous piles of rubble—with & | east of the capital. Sierre Madre hills. up nls tntesnel Iousel hn pose. He is a phlegmatic Hoo- | needed by the patrol. three-way contact between Hie away=in the hills. ber. Sure few habitahle buildings here and Estimates of the numbers of A few good military roads a Sav + elves i hin ry sier whose sole desire is to get He had set up his battery of Piper ow) lazily Roasice over 8 “Six hundred left” sald Love. answered _h there, miraculously spared the | these enemy guerrillas ran under | j..4ing far ehough into the A Yoo e Pipes $ Temple Jus ko Mince ts soon "as the | three 105;mm. self - propelled Jap positions, an 3 ne pa | apy undied Jeo, Sig Lobe, answered effects of methodically fiendish | 30,000. Extermination of them ountains provided jumping-off in Je e expec 8 - which hay gone out lop ao and Audrey Jean. { had advertis destruction by the Japs and the | has been a slow and costly Job,” Ulces for what the men called Tesu. : 0 . T ' D | J It Y k am Yiie a Tw oa ng he “Fine! That's right in ‘em,* | number was terrific ‘blasting of our own ar- | but ‘one that must be done be- | Weir rabbit hunting. When we reached a ‘small trib- kinawa exan s.uUraw OITS an way up fo the draw where said Love. atoll Bo tillery, | fore there could be complete | put in this case, the rabbit | Wary of he Marikina . river . : enemy was congregatyg. The battery fired nearly 300 | Howard had Furthermore, while thousands | peace in this neighborhood. fought back and often the hunter which marks the boundary of the OKINAWA, Aug. 13 (U. P).— Presently he addressed a man Col. William E. Lobit, a Texas | rounds. It bracketed the Japs | ber that tur: ' R base camp, a sign on the bridge with “Hi there, stranger, y'all | combination of pepper and vine- | in a ee-side corral, driving One of our ¢

of service forces were engaged in A great deal of this day-by= | fajled to come back alive. Our Pharmacist’'s Mate 3-c Malcolm ; 3 : making a beginning on the pro- day and night-by-night extermi- | .qquaities were light, butgwe had | read “No Kibitzers Allowed Be- Robertson, 19, of Gonzales, Tex ain't from Texds, are you? gar took over the phone, them down to the waiting arms L- the way the digious problem of restoring life | nation project was the business | hem yond this Point” (The. reverse $Me y ie “Why, yes,” the Okinawan re- “Hello, Ralph,” he said. Head- | of the patrol. At nightfall, L “woman.” , = . was equally emphatic: “No Japs received the surprise of his life | sponded, ‘I'm from Galveston. | quarters says it wants prisoners | company, together with a unit of Friday adve:

te ent by to see somethin int.” : I went by jeep to, g Allowed Beyond THIS Point.”) ‘recently when he and other ma- | Where you from?" and you will take as many as | Filipino guerrillas operating with of Indianap It had 20 ‘mail postma

i » o . nor oper=- ; "I'm Only Man Alive Who OL UIESS pire ios as of At this point steel helmets be- | rines were helping hundreds of Robertson was speechless, | you can. But don’t take them | it, came into camp. Cs strategy. Not so ‘minor in the | came fashionable. So were car- | civilians from a cave on southern Then he learned that “George at the. cost of lives, Don't take | prisoners. It had killed 108 Japs. !! August. Th . I mind of a boy who found him- "pines. I wondered (aloud) Okinawa. : : : Kiyuma had lived . 23 years in | chances.” Juicy Lucy and her pals had rung niillion colle Held Exploding Atom Bomb self suddenly pinned down by whether our driver, Pv. Melvin | Robertson was passing the time | America, the last four. of them Ralph, who was Capt. Ralph | the bell on 13 more." office with 1 . I snipers’ crossfire or a sudden, | Stottelmyer, could get his car= | by making remarks t6 the Oki- | in Galveston running a carnival | Powell of L company, on patrol, This was a successful operation, issue Roose ] its ‘case quickly | nawans, such as “Up Y'go, gran- | bingo game. He cdme to Okinawa | advised the colonel that he had | But routine. On July 31, the 38th . at Hyde Par maw.” “Okay, mate, I'll give you | to visit his parents. before the | established contact with the Japs | division announced the killing of for their co a hand.” * He didn't think they | war and was forced to remain by | and already caught a few stragg- | its 25,000th Japanese soldier on " the last few

understood English. «+ | the Japanese. _. lers. Luzon, : nothing_ nev : | starry-eyed,

.

" ; i ew p - | bipe out of By JACK ROWLES An atomic bomb explosion in New| murderous blast from a Jap ma ] y York!” chine gun. Tragedy is tragedy, enough if a berserk- Nip came |

| | whether you find it in the hills | dashing out on the highway. ) | or on a beachhead. Melvin, who has built up quite

United Press Staff Correspondent NEW YORK, Aug. 13.—I may be The bushy-haired mind: reader the only man alive today who has spread some yellowed press clippings

omic bomb ‘explode in his'on the desk. In the New York JourJet an, om ® sary-ejed

: {nal of April 23, 1929, was a Page One . Either that or Im just a stooge story about Dunninger’s. “atomic” ’ . and their gi for Joseph Dunninger, the man who experiment. It said: a ; .. 3 ! Beware.t : METER |

reads minds by radio and claims he| ‘A deadly use to which the ives } Ived the riddle of atomic destruc- might be adapted was the explod- : . : oie Joa _|ing of bombs in wartime,” the™“in- : Sy ; 5 Se on Fla In a Fifth avenue office, Dun- | ventor continued. He said that a i wipro Cah hilly ninger handed me a hollow glass| “control ~ station,” occupying .a ? > ; , > to egg With. a Jong, openend neck® - space 150° feet by 350 would be| ; os : ; otek zi vi Speck of Metals {powerful enough to blow: up the : : 5 : ar ok, c rol n dolls we Spee : entire United States. Knock ‘orice interest of ¢ acts worse,

“Bang ‘it on the desk,” he said.' «rhe principle has already been ie I banged. It was a tough little) reared to the war department for| ‘ ‘ bottle, with walls about one-quar-i,,, yse which the government) ter of an inch thick. It wouldn't|yisec to put it.” 5 3 0 _ break. LE LE | “The war. department,” Dun- " § “That little billiard ball,” Dun-| oer told me, “never replied.” Jr Sev ninger said, “will withstand 300 He said- he once experimented / . pounds of pressure.” with his explosive metal by putting : : \\ i yr SEVILLE German. anc : the America

The big-framed "mystery man ;; jn 5 pottle and sealing it. cleared his throat. “Now I'm going : ts show you an atomic explosion.

ww

Once a ‘Magic Box.’

I'm going to place a speck of spe-| “It demolished the room,” he . . cialy treated metal the size of a|said. “In large quantities, this|. : pitino ol | They den “grain of salt in that bottle and blow metal will knock a battleship -apart | ; = Seville’s " Ge it to pieces: Will you hold the bot- | and rival the present atomic bomb. | ; . 2 : officials are | The metal is cheap, abundant and| ; : : ; ; rorizing, Ge : 2 residents of,

tle?” | On the theory that Dunninger can be fed to a baby.” : og wanted to impress me, rather than| On the question as to just what| : ¢ | Excusing kill me, I held the bottle and was “atomic” about Dunninger’s : § + & . anonymity o dropped the tiny fragment of metal discovery, he said, “How else can ak , 1 was delivere: Into it. Nothing happened. | you explain it?” Eo 4 3 hand—unide “Shake ita little,” “said Dun-| In 1929 he called his “atomic” committee ninger, backing up 10 feet. | bomb a “magic box” and newspaper : . ne R pe k. A against the “Hey!” I cried. “Where are you | stories at the time said he shook | al 4 5 ih - Hit Ff officials. TI going?” : | New York's Central park in a dem- = - i ON : : j ; i : in the pay o . “It's perfectly safe,” he soothed.|onstration by remote control. : Pad : J ; 4 ment. The c A moment later the bottle ex-| Dunninger gave me some broken ” a : ao post employ ploded in a dozen chunks that glass for a souvenir but wouldn't : ’ : ha . pu BIN all mail sen dropped to the desk below my trem- even consider parting with a grain| conned bi : : d # Germans to bling fingers, | of his magic metal. 4 $i hE iw : 2 »/ lia 4 Seville. “There's your story!” Dunninger| “I spent-too many years working) > F Ea BE i Lag Gh: 3 tr of pA ¥ The lette: explained, dancing around the desk.' with it to give it away,” he said. £ £ i = IRR ¥ Be oF is NK Yared 7 several Gern : : wv Sg : Vd ; af £7 wih lives of Gen . The latte selves by m

“ Million-Dollar Museum Built rn] Siw gf Rds | lei? of ron To House 'Non-Objective’ Art | - ue Za TE dl Many Pe

. BEFORE By JOAN YOUNGER jozone-pumping units behind each 5 Jimted, man United Press Staff Correspondent | painting. : ” k to Ger NEW YORK, Aug. 13.—We went! These paintings will have no} They're From Wasson’s Down- 2a up to the museum of non-objective frames and no glass. They couldn't} . . . art today to see what kind of paint- 8¢4 dirty SRN a Spesial Seuss} : stairs Sent a Bw eater : will suck a irt out of everything] epartmen ings will be found in a $1,000,000 in the museum, including the vis- p

museum, that has wheelchairs and iors. —yes—a dry cleaning process for| According to a spokesman- for| Hep! Hep! Ye gals will be plenty of all visitors. ° | Guggenheim, the: building ought to] dateé-bait in these luscious classroom

| w sorry to say ; , 2’ $ ‘ale 50) y costume musts, Do take a gander at : fA i % 4 : ; ; i j 4 THE GR

Scie

we still don’t |get underway in about eight months, |

know. The trouble is the non-objec- | depending on priorities. It will be tives. This apparently means there moSty of Re Ths Property. at| our HUGE collection! You'll want 4 ; of Sd CN Ar 5 are no objects in the pictures, just|87th st. and Fifth ave, has been) , : \ : $ F ii ’ , w BS poo) P Tt rcliased, : them to mix or match. Wy ba : > E55 Beran JLogarithmic Spiral’ The pictures will be protected| . : ks La gases Ar : ot -% Science 2 {from the visitors by a sloping floor, | " Se girl EEE : 3 & BA given the hi which will enable anyone who wish- , ge % * 7 hd A ; y are making es to look down upon the paint-| oh & : ; cw . pr ; plans for th ings. Since the floor goes up, and| ? 4 5 n, 2, Ha 3 » y tific. researc | the pictures are hung at about waist| 2 , =: a | % 3 J f . Nevertheless level, this will put about a three- “PE i i : j 4 showld be foot chasm between visitors and) : ” 7 y 2 by ; . ¢ FP | future are st paintings. ’ # 3 % J the armed f Non-Objective Movies 3 , he ; ; j 3 portunity to Sn 7, abel : . % ; : i tion and th i ; and relative the thousane armed force tasks.

A prize among them is called “Little Pleasures.” It is by the late founder of N. O. A. (non-objective art), Wassily Kandisky. It is murky, with little bunches of things floating against a muddy background.: The things are shaped like toadstools. This picture will get a place -of honor in the new museum, built! There will also be a projection | by lomon R. Guggenheim. It has room for: the showing of other been designed by Frank Lloyd non-objective pictures. The room Wright and it will be a “true logar- Will include reclining chairs so ithmic * spiral,” spiraling upwards that you can ‘look at the domed 10 stories, but without a step or a ceiling if you do not want to look| Almost a window in it. lat the screen. [ a, tions of the You can roll around in it in| On. the screen are likely to be 3 fe” 3 3 % AEWA / A a series of your wheelchair, or take elevators,isuch pictures as were shown in| : i : ” : Rg : high places, and if you see the works you will!“Fantasia,” because Oskar Fish«| : nation relati have 4raveled three-quarters of a inger, who did a considerable por-| In Engla mile and seen hundreds of non-!tion of the animation for this mo- | a Bil : Be 5 My pi , young scient objective paintings. tion picture is a master non-objec-| 3 a, ta, 2 i Gn : Pll A y : ; forces even At the top will be a great glass tive painter. 3 o } Wi 4 Ra Fh at tasks for dome, and this, with the aid of|' “For the first time,” Guggenheim ks . wits . Tn, Vv : ih them so tha indirect lighting will provide all said, “purely imaginary paintings : im : : Ya Se light. Afr will be provided through will have an appropriate, ae a ’ : ; 2 d Few Con air conditioning units, plus small environment.” | . , ; _ THE RE tr — et ———————————————————————————— ees | ; , LR By director of : LL i } oo 4 Yi ; bills 5 : development

YOUR G.I. RIGHTS... By Douglas Larsen “Among take up. sci

Hosuitals Proride Care f ST e = Pp Ss rroviae ware ror : TG oh, : i i ; few student; » . I ; hil ' : fe on, : M : engineering ervous Ailments of G. I's oa. Fs who : . 4 y 0 i course of st WASHINGTON, Aug. 13 — Vet-| @—Why is it that only ‘age and)’ yj ! os 3 wt He 1 erans and their relatives have sent length of service are considered in jh f i 3 RE in the following. questions giving discharges to men in . the] han : 4% ib & ; was left ra Q—My son —has— just returned navy? My husband fers beyn overs : 24, Ly et fa ig . ’ . E--$4.98 board, Dra from overseas. He is perfectly well seas almost two years and has been| om i \ or = i . information and healthy except ‘he has spells in many battles, The army gives! | ; Ea, when he is very nervous, We don’t | credit for dependency, campaigns| % gh ; of ; i / 1 . ' As a co want him to go to a veterans hos- and other things. This needs ex-| 3 1 & i in F—$4.98 inquiry of pital lest he be kept there for a long plaining. b - ; Lg a i J 2 technology s time -and be called a mental case| A—T he navy discharges formula a . {i ERs fi ) received bac wnen he isn't at all. What do you takes only age and length of serv- 3 advise? . lice into consideration for release| 4 1 i A—All veterans hospitals now pro- because additional considerations / NA : j ; y vide out-patient care in their men- would release. men without whom Fs Bu a i ) ; ! tal hygiene clinics and neurosis cen- (the navy couldn't operate. You boa BY i y ters. When he has his nervous spells should be proud that your husband WRB HG El ae ¢ : he can get treatment and re- is one of these. ; | Ale Ry ‘ i f i py turn home without being admitted.| Q—Is there any land open to| ir ; Jaw. Y, : a and out o ; i . about the re

| in tompletel

i his condition is such that he homesteading for a veteran in New| should be admitted, it will be the York state? : best thing for him in the long run. | A—No, : Hi yp . ¥ : % ; “ ! Some of

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Book 4 must be submitted with

1; No. 2, No. 3 and| Bn ha A. a | angen he ke a ar tr Cal a WEA Th LTT ET > : .. nd re the

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