Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 1 November 1945 — Page 8
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IN
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tls ar ao epandtals Who covered the landing (wrote: + wTp say his conduct: was worthy of the highest traditions of the ma"pines is like saying the Empire State building moderately high.” Our - commanding” general Maj.
thought so, too. He named the Roosevelt
Moth r of Dead Tarawe: Hero Backs Universal Vegining
“By JIM G. LUCAS Staff Writer
Eo bat To Tare he farnes who say Ru in. scion mid Yas the Havel of 4 Jt ot Bw Hep they'd koown
few months later, President awarded Lt. Hawkins the congressional medal of honor. _ Bill's mother; Mrs, C. Jane Hawkins of El Paso, Tex, doesn't have
ME N00 01 ad he ote
today, "but if I had another son, I would want him to spend at least a year jn military training. Good for Discipline “Not. only would it be a safeguard for our country,” she con-
Julian C. Smith, must ha captured Jap airfield Hawkins field.
424 State Life Bldg. LL 1675 HERMAN L.) wie
RECREATION GROUP. | “TO HEAR TYNDALL
Mayor Tyndall will welcome delegates to the ares -recreation conference opening Sunday at World War Memorial. The conference is sponsored by the National - Recreation ° association’s Bureau of Colored work, _ J. W. Hall, general chairman, will preside at the meeting scheduled to start at 3:15 p. m., and Mayor Tyndall will be introduced by Mrs. Thomas D. Sheerin, chairman of the mayor's advisory committee on recreation. - Father Bernard Strange of St. Rita's church will give the invocation, and the list of speakers includes Dr, Lucien Meriwether, city councilman; K. Mark Cowen, superintendent of recreation, and E. T. Attwell, field director for the Bureau
tinued, “but it would also be a good thing for our young men. “There are many boys who have never ‘known discipline, It would |
|
indi
RELIEVES PAIN +
SORE TO] TTA) COLDS
who otherwise would never nd that they are, or should be, sub-|
bility to their fellow man. “When my son was in training,
been taught self-reliance or re-| | sponsibility. Too many have grown wh to believe that the only thing which matters in life is to do what | |we want regardless of its effect on the lives of others.” THE NEW Bill Hawkins was 29 when he | {died on Tarawa. Once he said “I {hate war, I don’t see why the Unit- | {ed States has to get in it.” He was]
(5 arion {in El Paso when the Japs bombed
for the hard-of-hearing | Pearl Harbor, and immediately en- | The hearing aid that s izes | listed in the marines. in the sounds of speech. Betrer. Scalded When He Was 3 Sus gyereand is 4 choice of | Bi rather died wher he was | Ww. Negi Apo ous Ault RAN Su years old. His mother sup- | Commerce Bldg. Indpls. Ind. parked au vy aslo in the-El
— ' o When Bill was three, a tub of | Clean Out Of
{scalding water was upset on him. | SOAP POWDER?
'One leg was drawn up and an arm! Used fois are needed in
was 50 crooked the doctors want. ed to cut a muscle, But for* several months, Mrs. Hawkins massaged the muscle dai ly for two or three hours. At the end of a year Bill was all
500ps « . . 0s well. | | ign; again, as machines, rugs, He had tried to enlist in the nayy, fabrics and many other but had been turned down because things you wont, of his scars. When they took him : er in the marines, his mother said TURN IN YOUR USED FATS! he was “the proudest boy alive”
When his regiment went overseas in June, 1942, he was a private first class. Aboard ship he was made corporal,” Before he landed on Tulagi In August he was a ser. geant, and during the battle for the Solomons he was commissioned & second leutenant. Mrs. Hawkins still doesn’t know what he did. ‘Wouldn't Talk “He would never tell nve she said. “He would write: ‘Mom, you and I, some day, will have & big gabfest, and I will tell you about everything’ but, of course, that day | never came.” We know what he did on Tae raws. We who were there saw him. The citation tells the story: : “First to alight . . . he unhesitatingly moved forward under heavy enemy fire , , . fearlessly leading his men on to join forces fighting to gain a beachhead, he repeatedly risked his life throughout
be a blessing in disguise for many |’
ject to constituted authority. . | “This may be the means of making them realize their responsi-|
he wrote me he was sorry for some ; 'of-the boys who came in with him, | because they obviously had not |
Dependable the day. On the dawn of the second A/-VEGETABAR * | day ,'. . returned to the dangerous cm PAKATIVE mission of clearing the beachhead i> Kile ERTL a an assault on a ‘posi. | GETA 25 BOX tion, fortified by five enemy machine Mop un. Crawling forward in the face -— thering ‘enemy fire, boldly fire ITCHY SCALY .'ng point blank into the loopholes [and 35 completing the destruction with + refusing to fatter. Sronaes = “seriously wonded ” {destroying three more pillboxes beInvisible’ |after being seriously wounded. Decor isi 1 Mrs. Hawkins saw her son only Promptly tions o SORES after he enlisted, He never First applications « { wonderful soothing’ ‘had a furlough. All she has today medicaing Zum: Zomo-3 + itching and burn. 18 his medal of honor and a collecAni went Uo scaly skin, |tion of letters froin his friends.
successful for over 35 years! | Mrs. Hawkins knows the cost of
pr = T
Zemo convinces! Invisible J war. She says she favors universal = tor fe : 1 training “if order that our ug x tores Tn Sizes. [country may be prepared for any {eventuality.”
SMART HANDBAGS
of Colored work. The Rev. W. M. Edwards of Seventeenth Street Bap'tist church will give the benedic- | tion,
was a step nearer dissolution today
Bell's Palaces high in the Hollywood hills.
the receiver, said he almost needed a map to work through the maze of rooms in the homes, property of Christ's Church of the Golden Rule. The church also owns hotels, resorts, office buildings, laundries and
order as head of the church on charges of misusing its money.
Manaugh had to break when refused entry, was hung with Oriental drapes and decorated with gilded loveseals. It had a small theater, & pipe organ and a blue swimming pool. There also was a saloon hidden behind a secret panel in a billiard room, Manaugh said,
A state receiver took over two of
Charles H. Manaugh, agent for
THE INDIANAPOLIS MES
California Seizes Fabulous Empire of ‘Man
“The secopd home, valued at $45, Mankind United, which a California committee
organiza ly ain, bored ¥
by California Atty. Gen; Robert W. Members of Mankind United and Kenny charging Bell with using|of Bell's church were forced to surGolden "Rule funds to finance his|render all their possessions ‘when defense on a sedition charge and|they joined and received only $5 a with failing to keép proper accounts |month and their board and room
The suit was the latest of Bell's|for working in the church enterlegal troubles over the Church and prises, Renney charged. i
dozen other business enterprises Bell has been deposed by court
One $75,000 home, into which
of quitting his job, it was learned
electric chair. He rushed off to
‘Executioner May Quit in Disgust
PARIS, Nov. 1 (U. P.).—Maurice “It might be a good idea for Desfourneau, France's state exec- | you to study the workings of the utioner, is disgusted and thinking | electric chair.” . That finished it. Desfourneau, who officiated at every guillotining in France in pre-war years, drew himself up and replied: “I am a man of feeling. As such, I will not lend myself to procedures which may be modernbut are inhuman. I prefer to
today. He heard a rumor that France was considering doing away with the guillotine and substituting the
the ministry of justice. Minister Pierre Teitgen. told him no
change was planned right away, quit.”
And there the matter stands.
but added:
kind United’
Manaugh sald he understood that P some of the 15000 members who|
wartime sedition for calling the at-
inorthern California,
had joined the organizations since | 1934 surrendered as much as $50,-
000 for admittance. : The “voice” was convicted of
tack on Pear! Harbor the result of “conspiracy” betweén the United States and Japan. He is free on _-{bail pending an appeal of the conviction. :
Manaugh estimated Bell's total}
holdings at better than $3,500,000. He said he was having trouble locating some of the empire's tangled assets
Among the properties, Manaugh said, were a multi-thoussnd acre ranch in Oregon, a dude ranch in a building in| Los Angeles’ financial district, and assorted bank buildings, laundries, bakeries, cafes, dental laboratoriés dnd real estate offices. “Bell, charged by Kenny with keeping $P000.000 of the church assets in cash, lived lavishly at swanky hotels, Manaugh said.
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