Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 14 August 1945 — Page 4

Audaci

s Japs Began Mich 1, P, STEPS Up 43 Enemy Vessels, Including CHINESE CONFER Ore-Boy Cigaret WEBB RITES SET * Of Aggression 70 Years Ago ‘FLASH PROBE Cruiser, Hit by U. S. Planes ON JAP DEFEATS Jon) Storie Roy FOR TOMORROW

By UNITED PRESS Seventy vears-ago—in 1875=Japan began her march of aggression that, before it wound up in utter defeat, was to lead her to virtual control of the Far East. From the time she acquired title from Russia to the Kurile islands! in 1875 she had little to daunt her until the United States began to recover—late in 1942—from the treacherous blow struck at Pear] Har-| bor a year before. She first seized small

Purges disturbed the still confused the Bonins in 1876, the Loohoos in Communist state of Russia. 1879. Then in 1895 after a short decisive war with China, she seized! the big island of Formosa. Ten years later Japan made a] _ sneak attack on the Russian naval busied America. base of Port Arthur in: Manchuria. | The war was brief. Russia was de- | feated. The Russian fleet: was sunk

Political scandals beset France. Depression and | strangled Britain. Depression and domestic

war. said Japan had accepted allied SUr- gn, 103 hased planes—the greatest |

reform! A reward of $5000 was offered Eastern airforce—attacked ship- | by the U. P. for the identification ping and rail facilities at Kyushu land conviction of the person re- island on Sunday. | { sponsible. So Japan struck again—in 1937,]

Strike Against China

: v SS : | ctriog. & . , : | St. Clair st. today figured the © By HUGH CRUMPLER lindustries and airdromes were bat- |, cigaret shortage should end right

: United Press Staff Correspondent tered both at Kyushu and Shikoku J |* along with the war | " A.T.&T. Completes Check- MANILA, Aug. l4—More thanfbut Okinawa, dispatches revealed | and Chief, Chiang Plan “So ¥hen a clerk at Hooks Former Governors Among 1000 Far Eastérn airforce bombers the heaviest damage was inflicted } ‘drug store. Meridi nd Ohia -— up, Reports to FCC. and fighters attacked the Japanese on Kyushu. - | Surrender Stage. hy } ore hi iH a Rng, Ho | : Pallbearers. ‘home islands during the past 48| Myazaki, an important factor ‘ Si8 SOUR HT ent 5 Quic 5 | NEW YORK, Aug 14 (U. P)—|hours and destroyed or damaged center and port on the edst coast of By GEORGE WANG request for a package of fags, | The United Press stepped Up IS g¢ Jeast 43 enemy vessels, including | Kyushu, was left in flames by a con- United Press Staff Correspondent the latter Topped around. the |b former legislator and prome investigation today into the false , cruiser it was disclosed today. centrated attack by 160 Thunderbolt | CHUNGKING, Aug. 14—Gen. Ho| counter faster than his name inent livestock breeder who died flash which was fed into its wire| pons MacArthur's head- fighter’ bombers: Smoke rose .10|Ying-Chin, commander in chief of| implies. : es RE | system Sunday “night and which . A § 15,000 feet. yoo E, | Instead of a pack, Quick found [Sunday night in Methodist hospital, |quarters announced that more than | |Chinese land forces, arrived in| whole cartons of cigarets below !will be held tomorrow at 2 p. m. in

Other B-24's destroyed four . : an) ' : render terms. {mass -raid "vet staged by the Far freighters ranging from 2000 to 6000 Chungking last night to confer with the counter, In his excitement |, o Hisey ‘and Titus mortuary, Ss y 8 y Titens. Three enemy planes were shot {Generalissimo Chiang-Kai-shek on | he disarrayed a display case and Burial will be in Crown Hill cemes down an and unestimated number arrangements for Japanese surren-| Sventially Noung. p _ sion tate ctyny ; ; ‘en a /ision. e n y. destroyed on the gtoutd. ders in China. The central news| get any cigarets. Active pall bearers will be Grey= ble McFarland, Fred Webb, Fred

Nordsiek, Leon Clark, Harold Em

Funeral “services for John Bright

| R { In the New Guinea, Bismarks and! v_Tenorted thal i Direct bomb hits were scored on|solomons. areas 6th division Austra-|38€0CY YEPO! sl. one enemys

The American Telephone & Tele- a eruiser, United Press ‘War COr- jigns ; : . oe force in the coastal province of’ 3 : : . : VE lians maintained steady pressure : in the Tsushima straits And Japan'at China. Her intention was a graph Co. reported to the federal respondent Russell Annabel re- a Ee or ady ph the | Chekiang already had capitulated. Hi} DAVIS HERD mett and Griffin McMath. $itiy 1 !

short war, the subjugation of China. communications commission and ported. Four small freighters were Wewak sector forcin the from! So myopic was the world that i}. y Pp. that an investigation had sunk, 26 were damaged, and WO siubbornly def E er ! Japan bought her war materials in ’ y stubbornly defegded positions.

‘controlled Manchuria. Moved on Korea in 1910

Two audacious moves in the next decade consolidated her

It was reported reliably that Gen. The list of honorary pallbearers Hsu Yung Chang, chiéf of the boar | includes:

q of operations of the national mili- |

tshown that the false flash did not were set afire. Four American] (The Australian .radio reporte

to any armistice |

. . Henry P. Schricker, M Clifford Towne the United States and in Europe.!, . + ' . te am . : : . : sk ii send, Paul V. McNutt, Claude Wickard aA “originate in any of its test stations. planes were knocked down ‘by Australian troops on Rougainviile| tary council, would head the Chi-| o ’ Judge Sherman Minton, Prof. Re B. Cooley, Dean Skinner 1 Lynn,

of power. In 1910, she moved. in on Only Russia gave- military belp 10 rye U, P. leases its news wires enemy anti-aircraft batteries, but were holding a bomber in readiness nese delegation

Korea, an empire in itself, | In 1914, while the European continent was fighting world war I,

was not..a shor way. Though Japan punched the, feather AR : houg pan -p ment yesterday in response to & 33) land-based planes returned to'officially have accepted the allied

LeRoy Portieus, E. Kirk McKinhey, Ja=

freom the. A. T. &.7T. : the pilots of two were rescued. which will fly over the Japancse mee be me cob Weiss, Thomas Hendricks, z Curiis he A. T. & T. issued this state-| Radio Tokyo said that more than positioris the minute the Ja Lt. Gen, Albert C. Wedemeyer, yo White, James Stewart, Walter— McCarty, 3 S the Japanese ; \ : : Oi : Maurice Early. U. S. commander in the China the- Signal Corps ; Officer Lived Meir ine” pally Mi Hudler,

Caltwell, E. J. Barker, Albert C

ting with Japanese emissaries

illow of China with a million, . y , y d A) | Ji request from the U, P. and the the attack on Monday. terms and will drop 100.000 leadct? ater, was quoted by a Chungking Here 19 Years. - lie: Robert ©. Graham Jy.

the Mikado's fleet seized Germfary’s island colonies in the Pacific, Her action went unprotested After the war, Nations gave the islands | mandate, under condition main unfortified.

steel fists, the feather-strong Chi- FCC : : ’ : to investigate: p . i i ap’ 1 nese fell only to rise again. 4 In Sunday's attack seaport cities, announcing the war's end. of For five years the “Chinese In-ipeograpn Co. today completed a E cident” went on, and Japan bided | a : | : i : : Chester ave. who served as exeCu- Crawfordsville; Phares L. White, Oxford Fi, 4 re ’ {check of its various test stations urren er a | Japanese-occupied points in China. . te . . | Bverett 8. Priddy, Warren; U. O Brouse, _ her time to strike the United States. | along the route of the United Press ) y | tive communications officer fpr the Kendallville: Levi P. Moore, Rochester:

ingto; Charles R. Morris, Salem; FP. M, Oversireet, Columbus; Orin Anders, Terre vig Haute: Harry FP. Caldwell, Connersville; Col. John M. Davis, 802 N. A. G. Norrick. Muncie: O. L Reddish,

newspaper as saving that American | troops would assist the Chinese in an advisory capacity in taking over

“The . American Telephone &

Wedemeyer, speaking to a rey P . signal corps of the Far East air | Louis J. Demberger, Stewartsville, Homer

juoted. as sayin 4 q ying General hospital. He was 40. P. Reed, Lafayette; and Fred F. Bays,

Then “in June, 1941, Germany at-| _._ =~ xd = . ’ ’ circuit where last night's false Ja porter for the Ta Kung Pao, was : 3 : E. Sch , Columbia City. Jap, h OFFICERS RETIRE Be At Okinawa that “Chinese jOrces, died yesterday in Billings | = Schuman, Columbia Ce: Dun Harry

racked Russia—and hope of Rus-{ . is ; San ielp in the Pacific ‘aguineti® oder Sash origwated, Japan weakened. The Black Dragon sociely over-| threw \the Japanese civilian govt, Gen. Hideki Tojo became tOmmunications commission,

From 1918 to 1931, low, plotting, building, watching; and waiting. The newly born Soviet Russia threatened Japan's grow-|

strengthening their nation and a

Reports to FCC LONDON, Aug. 14 (U. P.j— troops will be moved as fast as| Ts ve | Kenneth’ Blackwell, R. H. Gordon, G. RK - P dai | Fourteen local men were released E possible to take over Japanese occu- Col. Davis was returned to the juiop, John 8.° Thomas, Lant Sum= As a result of this inquiry the . { British sources understood today’. : : ‘ : | States several months ago after be-|ner, Horace Parson, J. N. Godsey, Oarl AAT &T orte : from the separation center at Camp ¥ ipied points in China. American ill whil t d Lev | Hedges, Paull G. Moffett, Horace E. Ab-. - *s ie . reported to the federal |that Japan's formal surrender Will' mncers and men will assist them in|COTMDE I W ile stationed on Leyte.!bott, Ralph 8. Norwood, Charles E. Fore

| Atterbury recetitly under the army's » ye 8 man, ‘ y, Fred Hoke, Edwin and ¥3 take place either aboard an allied an advisory capacity.” He was awarded the bronze stari;®g . .;i" um; Lugar, O. K. Van : for “meritorious achievements while Arsdall. Harry F. it. Pred Sharp,

premier, the military clique was Made a copy of its report available point system. ins Bt Ohinbs — Al : attleship or at Okinawa. - seriously ill” in the South Pacific. Richard T. James and Orval C, Pratt,

in complete control. The Boomerang Blow Dec. 7, 1941—the - Japs attacked i an Pearl Harbor, The boomerang BlOW | 410 emitte Wash- was struck, even while Japan's] rms to most famous diplomat, Sabura Ku-| oe the United States from (a¢ ‘White | rusu, was in Washington, with. peace tape the ‘equipment her drive to talks prepared. " 1942—The war went almost en-lyinue to co-operate with the United |S S8t- Arthur Carter, 1028 S. New Jersey would accept

dream to conquer

whose mania was army from San Francis. to. dictate peac:

meaning Asia for the Japanese. | tirely the way the Japs had planned poco ; : ” \ . ss and the FCC in their i sti- | st.; Sgt. Joseph A 7 y ¥ In 1931, she swallowed the whole it—Hongkong, Singapore, the Phil-| cation of the incident.” hyesti oe, ap pern, 110 XR. Sey Jetse;

of Manchuria, renamed it Man- ippines, the Solomons, New Britain]

ito the United Press, that the flash y i 1 b ; ; 4 [Sout ok VE aeBtet in 800 11 ae emcee a vn | pres Have bean sheiatie SS OINOUS. MAN: PAYS [200s ere ree oo De hrosm AT & T. lest station. The rea. 0" 8° regulation, and five In- the U. S. for someiime that the | served 19 years as transmission en- | JOSEPH CHEEK son for this i$ that the flash was G1aRapolis officers have reverted to surrender will be signed ahoard gineer for the Indiana ‘Bell Tele-| Services for Joseph Cheek, who" d by aytomatic tape and inactive status. the Ameérjtan batiiestip. Missourl $1 FOR V-J HILARITY phon Co. In 1026, ypon graduation |died yesterday at the home of his these test stations are not equipped, The men released under the point ig hid He o frou Purdue GRIversity, he was|dalighter, Mrs. Eva Hicks, 555 'S, to perforate] svstorh are: " . 24 | pe S Ble. wad S5Pes o Sst His ~ short-lived V-J celebration commissioned in the army, and was Auburn st., will be conducted ThursYoud: Castel either Gen. Douglas MacArthur, = c janes C. Brown $1 and| oiled to active duty in 1941. He day at 2 p. m. in the Bridgeport “The A.T.&T. said it would con- Sat. Walter Chast 3008 Laseile st. Adm. Chester W. Nimitz or both ¥2, Seng went overseas with the signal corps/Church of the Nazarene by Rev. the Japahese sur- 8 certain amount of time in Mu- i; November, 1944. | Ciarence Talbert, pastor. . nicipal Court 4. { A native of Owen couniy, he was | Mr. Cheek, who was 76, had been Pic, Eugene Long, 348 W. 3st st. "| “Tr———eeesoeihaes Brown was charged with drink- an Indianapolis resident about 19{a resident of Indianapolis for 30

; g 1st § . - — mine re Gir “Piercy. 319. 8, Walcott <i: pic HOOSIER STARRED IN enness, resisting an officer and dis- years, He belonged to the Presby- years. Burial will be in the I. O,

Chester JoLaRoche, vice chairman Maen Piercy, 3i9 8 Walcott si Clarente Satterfield. 16 N. Addison he dangled terian church and Theta Chi fra- O, F. cemetery in Plainfield.

st.; T. Sgt. Edwin Burns, 911 E. Maryland render.) -

chukuo, and stru t a hin -— er st t S y the spri » 5 ck out at China| —all were lost to us by Pring. [of the American Broadcasting Go.|T Sgt John Hartman, 264 E. Iowa & A-BOMB RESEARCH SY one alos f € eslde a \ M ta . precariously from eighth floor ternity Survivors besides Mrs. Hicks ine

: . Then in June, the Japanese Were jast night telegraphed Hugh Baillie | Pc. Carol Dduglas. 1822 Shanghai area. The then American |in the Aleutians. That was the uy p president, that his network hal Sir hateld Short eloss Times Special window of the Claypool hotel. He Secretary of State Henry L. Stim- high water mark of the Japs—the would “be ‘pleased to contribute 2 Georgia et. 4nd Cpl. Chest r Cummings GREENCAS1 i \ 14.—Re- told Jud ge : son called for intervention, put his last act of aggression she was to substantial ‘amount. to: the reward cit Work on’ the atomic bon ol ete : make—the end of a fanatical dream offered by thé U. P. fof the appraThe Leggue of Nations locked the [to control a hemisphere and in- hension and conviction of anyone, and Pfc. Joseph Ford, 820 Ft, Wayne ave. Bittles Jr.. 1943 DePauw graduate, Ringling Brothers, Barnum other way—toward Europe, where herit the earth—an end she refused found guilty of the fraud.” : | The five officers have have re- according to a refent war depart- Bailéy circus the rising menace of fascism had /to admit until hundreds of thou-| : dge resulted in the power of Adolf Hit- sands more men were killed, and ler, in the conguest of Ethiopia; her homeland)ravaged by the might in the Spanish civil war,

IN INDIANAPOLIS

MARRIAGE LICENSES

EVENTS TODAY

an

" Survivors include his wife, Vir- clude three other daughters, Mrs, John Niblack he was ginia: two daughters, Beverly énd Dora Davis, Mrs. Lora Fite and earch work on the atomic bomb that elated over Japan's flop, He Linda, both of Indianapolis: «his Mrs. Marie Marsh. two sons, Walter evelopment was done by James A. also said he was connected with the parents, Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Davis, 'and John, all of Indianapolis; two 3 } and Spencer, and two brothers, Radio-. brothers, John of Kentland and man 2-¢ Bruce Wilson Davis, with| William of Monticello, and four Cooper Urges A. P. Aid verted to inactive status are: {ment disclosure. | The judge, reminding the de= the navy in the Pacific, and Renos, sisters, Mrs. Mary Robbins, Wine Kent Cooper, executive director of uP Ph, Man Cuitis ji37 Belmont sve; Now a seaman 1st class in the fendant he was lucky not to have, Spencer. : | gate, Ind.; Mrs. Betty Swanie, the Associated Press, last night rec- | Lf., Merisle R R. 16 Capt Edward Davy, Bittles worked under the di- flopped himself, asked Brown if he ASKELL p HIGGINS | Lafayette; Mrs. Salley Smith, Los tommended to the A. P. board of gi-| William Jobn Fashington bIvd ond, Cant.| rection of Dr, H. B. Hass ind Dr.jwas an acrobat. Brown drew him- |W ASTELL NS - © |Angeles, Cal, and Mrs. Martha. | rectors that the A. P. “add an appro- re md Earl T. McBee-of the Purdae chem- self up and announced that on the| Services for Haskell D. Higgins, | Denny, Somerset, Ky. | priate amount to the reward offered POPE WELCOMES PEACE istry laboratories, ? contrary, he’s a circus concession-| Who died Saturday at his home in by the United Press associations for| yATICAN CITY. Aug. 14 (U. P msm matin jai. 2 ougit to be slung Hing Acton, will be hen thie Afternoon | MRS. OLLIE STAGGS th i PAYEE ; » AUE. - 2) a e circus right now,” he ed. at 2 p. m. in th cton Presbhy- ain : le apprehension and -conviction of —Pope Pius XII expressed, great BYRNES’ AID QUITS | Judge a: agreed and sent Ban, heh Burial will be Tl Services for Mrs. Ollie Staggs, 282 N. Holmes: ave. a practical

Anseimo 1017 Laure! st . The men released as over age are. T. 4th Gr. Paul Roth, 1001 College ave

r.-anyone guilty: of i f ; ao : Ke guilty the Incident of ga¢isfaction today when he received : WASHINGTON, Aug. 14 (U. P.). him away with only a dollar fine! Acton cemetery. | ; : J : nurse, - will. be conducted at 1:30-

Indianapolis ¥ Men's club, International,

noon, Central Y. M. C. A. §112 Crawfordsville road

EVENTS TOMORROW

fraud as reported by, that } 1 i . De agency” Po Ir NEWS news of the Japanese, indication to|— Assistant Secretary of State Dean on the disorderly conduct count.| Mr. Higgins, who was. 50, was Ce s . \accept surrender terms. However, Acheson has resigned, it was _re- [The drunk and resisting an officer the operator of a grocery and meat | P- T* tomorrow. in the -G, 11. Herre mann Funeral home. Burial will be

Cooper pointed out that there is aty, : ; per p here is atyatican informants said there would vealed today. There were reforts charges were dropped. store. in Acton and was a member i é {in Memorial Park cemetery.

t law against tampering with : ; : Rethel 8 pering with wires inipe ng official manifestation. by the that he would take another high, , of the Pleasant Masonic lodge, ; : Mrs. Staggs,—who- was. 78, died

luncheo Raymond Fiscus, luncheon, Room, | "yee edith, 28640 Winthrop Junior Chamber of Commerce, Kiwanis elub, luncheon, noon, Columbia | Cl club | Hazel Clerk, 1119 N. Delaware : i Independeny Jewelry Workers union, meet. Fr w. Mary | associations be protected against | ] Pp. m:, Hotel Washington, | |

; Begly Elliott hers, “I hope, therefore, that ths : | At St. Frameis—Joseph Kenneth Boger, U. S. army; June Harbon, board of directors of the Associated Ee Mrs. Elvin Hill, Mt. Vernon; Mrs. ph, B

Alvin Reed, 3214 N. Capitol; Colleen Thom-

Delaware; Ethel United Press.” - | a yg celebration of theéir aunt, Sister his mother, Mrs. Anna Higgins,

interstate commerce, { ME + | “It is imperative that the integ- Holy See until the ‘official an- government job, probably in the] ~ ed Scottish Rite, Murat Shrine. Inde- : : : rit¢ of the news reports of the press nouncement of surrender is signed.'department of justice, { LOX AL | pendent Order .of Odd Fellows, | Sunday in City hospital. A native y SA 1 let —————— 4 | Knights of Pythias and the Acton |°f Owen county, Ky. she had been | a resident of Indianapolis 37 years,

aud” ana] 1 ' Te? A | Presbyteri hurch. fraud,” Cooper said in a message Dottie of the Elephant Ballet L BRI EFS a his ‘wife, My {She Wat 3 mueigiber of Washing

sept over A. P, wires to A. P. memRachel Higgins; ; ac iggins; three daughters, qo, ions include a daughter,

Mrs: George Pfaff, Indianapolis, land two sisters, Mrs. Flora King, | Indianapolis, and Mrs. Mannie Corya, Dupont.

Press will add an appropriate! Herbert A. and Harry J. Baker Paul McCauley, Indianapolis, and .amount to the reward offered by the and their families of Indianapolis Miss Rose Ann Higgins, Acton; a will attend the diamond jubilee son, James M. Higgins, Rushville:

Mary Theopista, tomorrow in Sts Rushville, end ‘two sisters Mrs. |

Fa ashington VANDAL PUNCTURES A _ Louis. Earl Fortner, Rushville, and Mrs. MRS. EMMA HARVEY

JIS. army: Juanita Hous.

008 College; Lola Brame

Vinecent's—Charles, Maxine Muegg 3031 Purman Burde!t Henry, Flossie Tiloerry, 1103 beth 'W John FP

hampe 1812 “WW. Morris

99 Brooks, 24, at Methodist (nos x

Charles MoCarthy,

8. army; Kathryn Korn,

, at 1522 N. Arsenal, na Anna C. Green, 70, at 2112 N, Delaware Waiter Elmore Kimberlin, 2258 N. Dearborn; Mildred | 2138 Avondale place. | Albrecht, 64. at Cay, carcinoma. | George Moore, 2345 N. Tacoma; Doar Duls78, al Lopg, aiterio-| worth, 3345 Tacoma . Howard Bokenkamp 7220 Pendleton Pike

0 Gindys Woodward, Osgood Bixler, R. R. 12, Box 352,

Daniels, £4, at Embardt

MASS PICKETI HOLLYWOOD

ting of Samuel Goldadios by film strikers was ames Kr

rmy - \ Division; Dora Stinson,

lon uckle; Margaret GasLindsey, 1413 Charles; Betty Rizo,

EIGHT AUTO TIRES The Seremonies will mark Sister: Raymund Jackson, Indianapolis, Services for Mrs. Emma L. Hare cra oo ' , Mary Theopista's 84th birthday as ——— vey, life $ i i The “meanest man in the world well as Heopista anniversary of her CHARLES V. PETKOVICH hi Bielone resigent of Jiidianapeiis was nominated today by .two auto- y final ‘niin's vows. She was born at’ Charles Vuchko Petkovich, of|2133 Webb st. will be held at 3p m. mobile owners as the vandal who . Logansport. The- festive celebration 530 W. Maryland st., died last night |tomorrow -in the Krieger funeral yesterday afternoon perforated eight i will be in the Sisters of Notre Dame |in Methodist hospital. after a long home precios bizes vith a ; e pick, : § 4 school. illness. He was 67. | The Rev, I". R. Daries, pastor of Ti ward 8 Sent Jysen, 818 W, WR, ' rp ‘ ; A native of Serbia, he had lived |Zion Evangelical and Reformed 24th st, and M. G. Kute, 5147 Win- : : etl. Senator Raymond E. Wills will jn Indianapolis 40 years. He had |crurch, of which she was a membe: throp ave., reported to police that A io X a be a commencement speaker at peen employed by Kingan & 4.Co. | wir officiate Burial will be in Crown while their cars were parked in RC Reo vs Franklin college’ Aug. 21. It -will 35 years. [Fill : » front of 2929 Columbia ave, the ; Ibe the school’s second wartime sum- |. Mr. Petkovich was & member of | Mrs. Harvey was 76 , vandal punctured one tire 15 times ; a mer session commencement. the Yugo-Slav National Home, | Survivors od a daughter Mrs and. the ‘seven others nine times! Es ? |* To receive degrees are Joan Serbian National Defense Organi- | Arthur Junker, Huntington, and two each. : |Ritchey, Kirklin; Virginia Hart, zation and the Rumanian Orthodox sons, ‘Edwin J, Indianapolis, and ain 0 ‘Lebanon; Richard Lentz, Anderson; church. Only survivors are three|Emmett C., Columbus, O

RELIGION TEACHING, | pe : (Mary io. Pratl Connersville; nephews | res ya McRoberts, ; John | : FR. GOOSSENS TOPIC o 7 ose Schover, Bonny so] “ones eres wt be nit | SERVICE PERSONNEL The Rev. Fr. Victor L. Goossens 3 Ai Puquesne, Pa.;, Rebecca Holland- [of Viko Tashich, 1235 N. T will speak on “Teaching Religion in | bagk, Mary Alice Wagner, Constance | ot. or rt oho al tha ion! CENTER {S PLANNED the Home” at the regular monthly | Andrews and Mary Gene Wiesman, church. The Rev. Paul Oraciun, | 1¥vington post 38, American Les

{meeting ofaghe Foster Parents’ aux- ‘all of Franklin, ¥ | pastor, will ‘officiate. Burial will be gion, will open a servicemen's cen |in Floral Park cemetery. ter at the post home, 124 8. Downey

lary of tHe Catholic Charities J EE be § io rs bureau tomorréw at 8 p. m, tm the ; Eg *| “Labor Relations Involving, Union \ave, tomorrow night. The center VRE Se CI Contract Negotiations” will be the | yppNoN T, WENDT \will be open for men and Wola«n in

|Catholic Community Center hall. A round tdble discussion will fol- | JER 1 .|topic of B. J. Fleming, director of| , gorvices for Vernon T. Wendt, Service. discharged personnel and low Fr. Goossens’ talk. Mrs. Charles 7 SCT (personnel for Inland Container |gse pnglish ave, who was killed in| Sheir families. : Hanrahan, Holy Cross church or-| WV Corp. speaker at the Junior Cham- | “0 torevcle aceident Sunday, were! Homer Reder, post service officer, ganist, and ‘Mrs. Donald Dick, [ber of Commerce luncheon at the pug yesterday in the J. ©. Wilson|is in charge. He will be assisted 'vocalst, will present a musical pro- : | Hotel Washington. tomorrow. funeral home. Burial will be in| by Sterling Haryey, Clarence hi? gram. | ’ | The Indiana Women's auxilia portland. Tenn. | sons, Paul La rt ‘and Harold HOCK KILLS | : | ‘fo the 38th division will meet in the | Mr. Wendt, who was an employee Boyd." Earl Kleiner, 1lth district of P. R. Malléry. &’ Co., was a Service officer, and Dr. C. B. Cham-

SHOCK KILLS FARMER i home of Mrs. George Bork, 5105 °F the SOUTH BEND, Aug. 14 (U. P)/— i | Washington. blvd., , 12:30 p m. member of the Church of, the bers, 11th district adjutant, will be : = 7 Nazarene, He was 29. - {present tomorrow ‘night. Repres

Frank Crothers, 42, was shocked | LOMIOITOW. Ls ‘Survivors ‘nelude his wife, Mrs, [senting Irvington will be Mrs. Paul

fatally last night at his farm home| »e / ; ; . i smi 1 Yi near New Liberty. A “jong. steel The grand finale in the Ringling Bros. and ‘Barnum & Roi'ee «=. | The Parents’ Council of the De Belic Wendt; a daughter, Wanda, fWeir, president of the Irvington

rod touched g high tension wire cus which opened.last night at the Southeasfyrn ave. showgrounds is Molay will meet at o'clock tonight 10, a son, Kennéth, 5; the parents, (Union of Clubs, and Paul Dorsey, es “he was taping Gown "asnew | the “Changing of the Guard,” featuring “Doltie,” one of the queens in the chapter houfe, 1017 Brogs= Ms. and Mrs. Alvid Wendt, Wort- | vice president of Irvington Busisy

Eos wy