Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 13 November 1945 — Page 3

1 Ur s willing to give “Ted Parker of Albuquerque! ing out in various places. n- Hoviet £ ‘pairs, providing : aa wd an 10: ihe adger,|croasing list had Dut out the soul {were “pulling out'} A supply terri the chest and body and died I-|unicn was now sagging and splin- [dust fire in the hold. tions, leaving the h I'm going to find out bm A Pi ge Pm: malas : day to A Jap sentry shot him from above boxes caught fire, ing -& pair of pilot was and tell him he|ipres times, twice through the body |explode. ing in force prepared for a fanciest trick shooting sinceiang once through the head. Abruptly the looting of the decks |the Soviet. dameconscious, linked in achievement.” Bill Hickok." Another 200th officer, Capt. Ger- ceased, and all scattered. Some ern Korea, | Game Director — He also” seemed to underscore « un ald G. Greeman of Deming, N. M. prisoners ran forward to look for base of He pointed out President Truman's Navy Day as- UT /the lifeboat turned over. iwho had been stiting at the foot of |life preservers in the cabins of the churia on the east, ers 4re busiest sertion that this country, interested the Americans were non-|the ladder, was .sought by his|dead Japanese Arthur, at the tip of s abounding in only in world peace, looked upon The Japanese had pro-|prother officers, Capt. James Mc-| All the Japanese except the cap-|jutting down into the her soft trees. possession of the atomic bomb as but : The l be, Shwagny . a sacred trust. v ¥ ’ Attlee, whose speech was broad- % question - worked ; cast over all networks, said the labor|’ jobs by clogging 3 government of Great Britian be- Fl their lifebelts on the non-swimmers.|jooked up and saw that after they ms on private ¥ lieves that “the foundations of] CMDR. FRANK BRIDGET never As Taylor lay on his back, striv-| Copt. Parker. the 'Japaiess . experts trapped : peace must be prosperity and left his post on the wooden ladder. ing to rest before starting for shore, ’ they saw that theirs were not the |withdrawal from Manchuria the ‘behest: of good neighborliness.” And it is de- fromthe next wave of American planes|tentries had gone away from the only dead of the Oroyku Maru. |was obscure, But informed ‘ termined, he said, to fight for this His volte: Was hosts, Ba, dove on their target. edge of the hatch. Huddled together thickly as they |refices to s pullout of the objective "with courage and a de- continual shouting. “1 saw the whole thing. A bomb| “Everywhere around us were | huddle in foxholes and cities, the |goviet units in a concerted, st the Russians termination to win through.” . |% He was relieved occasionally BY|py; near the stern hateh. I dovely ioc bodies with faces blackened | *Pinese had died in thelr state- way. action, suggested that the 4 ity traffic and “We have not stood up to our|; an officer of the 4th marines, Ma}.| below the service as far as I could The hag |T00Ms and been left there during |yrmy command had decided on curfew enemies for six years,” he. said, “to a Andrew J: Mathiesen of Los|go.” and lps purple, suns the night by those ‘who were al- ry) scale exit without waiting for i be beaten by economics.” : : PLE ; ’ . » stopped and there was a kind of ready safe on shore, the Chinese to resolve their own “Sees Co-operation The deluxe console combination set. . , + This RAC model is Angeles, that THE BOMB, striking barely aft|terrible silence. The ammunition ceased explod- |qimerences. Attlee sought to reassure his audiy scheduled to be in dealer's hands soon. Mathiesen had: a-co0h stile hat) 1p patch, rained splinters into “We. took hold of the shaky lad-|ing. There were now only a dozen The gravity of the civil war and ence about the so-called t = ss = = Be me Of ee en voice, | the hold full of naked men. The|jer and climped up through the Or so unwounded men alive on the | on jndication of thin hope for early government of Britian, Some per- ABANDONED CHILD'S the Heung imagined that they iron girder supporting the 2awh smoke. ; Sed, tn the water “Hey settlement were reflected in an ap~ 8 sons, he said, believes the Socialists RAD - soe that: smile. planks blew into the hold, felling We found the deck coverad with; " ater yelled, | ‘An | Peal to Chungking by Generalissimo 3 are “out to destroy freedom, of the] MOTHER IS SOUGHT , | Not eon to Japan. boys® he|®nd braining several men. There|Japanese and American bodes. throw ua down some shoes.” An|Ghiang Kal-shek's forces in Innes g individual, freedom of speech, free- . baby is be« “ Subic, | ¥2* 8 wild, uncontrollable rush for| “Our men were scooping up sugar threw down Mongolia for reinforcements. = * dom of religion and freedom of the| A BOmeless 2-year-old baby is be-| gy puamey , | would say. “Still right off old Buble. age, from the luggage and eating what!pairs which the swimmer tied| An official Central News agency = x press.” : ~ |ing held by police today while they SET : 11 Not Going to Japan.” “I saw the first man get iL." says|they could before they jumped around his neck before setting off | dispatch said the Communists were “They are wrong,” he said. search for the mother of the aban- mn For God's sake, boys, Bridget Maj. P. Langwith Berry of Bur-|over. for the beach. pressing a wide offensive that Attlee pointed out that the La-|doned ¢hild. — Nod rasp, avep Nong i lingame, Cal, taken on Bataan with ; xs w_ mE PLANES. Sen to brought under siege the key cities . bor party consists not only of wage| “Barbara Jean" was left with Mrs. ; 1 ¥e your plate, very are| the 86th field artillery. : “WE HAD a hard time finding ; "> Some of Patow and Kwelsui. earners, but also of professional and [Francis Martin, 619 College ave. Delivery Date Delayed by make generates « There “He had just put his feet on the|life belts. Only when we got over|back. The pilots came down low, business men, clergymen, journa- after she had advertised in the pa- ‘ men in the back bays who are §0-|, i, of the ladder, the side, in that clean, cool water, throttled back to see who it was in| BUILDING ITEMS BOOSTED lists, Protestants, Catholics and|pers for a baby to board. Lack of Parts. ing fo die unless you sit Still aNd} “yr yo jag not been there, I|we felt better. | the water, WASHINGTON, Nov, 13 (U, P), Jews. : The mother delivered the babv| LL Leo keep fanning. would have got it. He fell back| “There were bloody men hanging] They ust have seen that it was| _The office of price : “The old school tie can still be/to Mrs. Francis on Oct. 28, gave| ‘“*" "we SOME OBEYED Bridget and|d¢ed in my arms. I did not know|to timbers, but seemed en-|ATerians, for they swooped today announced an immediste ine seen, on the government benches,” |the baby's name as Barbara Jean,|anapolis to simplify production and Mathiesen. but not: alk who he was Suuraged f ey. 8 cool as they ve a an arty ths pal reese or 10 per cent in ceiling Be ough nthe. Barly. is. not. out EE , ei is Sis ibaiion problems. Some cuul hear. of Unagined oh Fao. the dark id out_of Somehow one of thellifebaita had [they did not strafe the shore. |hardware items used in building : : - & g i With the local plant in produc-|they heard, men plotting against : z " owered Toth Copyright, 1945 by The Indianapolis Times! pangiring homes. 7 Po to destroy any of the democratic “3S. A nen She disaphen ged tion, all RCA home radio manufac- [them in the darkness. reach of the Japanese fire.” hon ] u nem lt ane ‘toe Chicago Daily News, ine. freedoms, # does Intend lo Safe | ttle girl to the Juvenile Ald De.|turing will be in Indiana, with the| They unclasped their knives. guard the freedoms of the individ. t until she can be trans. Bloomington plant in table model] Chief Pharmacist's Mate D. A. ual. a: ‘ partment the ‘Guardian Home and small radio production and the| Hensen worked his way across phen UE Husingss gets too pow. |ferred ; plant at Monticello in the cabinet through She foul ri Stoning i so ‘becomes monopolis- f business. aisles to a little cluster of chief : . £ pot ue fo leave it In private] DE, ESCAPES JAIL |the assemby line in the Camden| “Look.” he aia, <Tve lost my “Attlee ‘said he looked to an era| CLARKSBURG, W: Va, Nov. 13|Plaht April 7, 1942. Sirice that.time|nerve. The fellows ofer in my bay SAYS: of increasing co-operation. between, (U. P.).—Police armed with rifies| Unt ¥-J day, RCA devoted its en-) ove PIOWE against me. They are his country and the United States slipped silently through » woods 10; fi7e eflorts toward war procucion. |OUR IB RIMEN = ==not #2 being an exclusive friend. Hiics fiom Nets Joday seeking io en systems, mo-|until he felt better. They told him “but as a contribution flush sd, : kniing together with al people eenered Kile of a 1-year i on Pike projectors, brondeast| he wis, aking, nomaene snd tha = through the United Nations organi- (and his jail-breaking companion, |iF8 equipment, nav gi haf dug Rady Suck zation in the bonds of peace.” | State police and local authorities|fduipment and many other elec-) In an hour 3 again, surrounded the woods last night] tronic items were supplied the vari- full of the same fear of death. Internal policies need not jeop- when Turner youthful slayer of|0us branches of the armed services.| Again they sent him back. Bo ardize this co-operation, he said. Darla’ Dean Pratt, 15. and Paul H | Even phonograph records, produced] In the morning he was found : A ENERGY USE AIDED MAN | Hahn, was seen entering it. in curtailed figures, were diverted dead, his belly slit open, 3 WASHINGTON—The of Turner, who was scheduled for !0 the armed services during the| of od A ' ) orm ra |femoval to the state penitentiary War. SOME of those by flluergy in various forms—mechanical,| yo iorday to await hanging for the| Associated Distributors Inc, 211|siofis sbem to have been protected chemical, hydraulic, thermal and |i. .jer of Miss Pratt and Hahn|S. Illinois st, will distribute the|by. them, : electrical, an outstanding scientist escaped from the Preston county radio products and records in Cen- na. seaman medico says: States, raised mankind from primi- {jail at Kingwood, W. Va., early yes-| tral Indiana. Harley T. Litteral is] “Alf that second = tive levels to the high standards terday after sawing through the general manager, and Don Delbrook| to me that I . of living of today. Ca bull pen bars. is sales manager. in ‘a big hotel, at robo — . - “I could 3 ; TR the lobby. ¥ : os ; man. who had suffocated, tangled a4 Sy S00 : with ih ame: bog bed 1 SAYS: x them toward the ear. . 5 2 - | “TI knew this and saw this and] =~ = lic = it still seemed to me that I was in - a hotel” v Capt. James McMinn of Carls. % bad, who was to survive and reach Japan, had the idea that he was - , still in Bilibid prison. He thought t he had kept visiting a friend and . : suggesting a game of cards, Lg on. AFTER Oroyku dropped anchor| almost no air came down the small Sey ! hatches. There were no ventilators. Animals could not have been y ' hinged under such conditions and Y Besides thirst and. lack of alr, the iii A ~ prisoners were suffering from some- * : = . ia . . | thing known to Christmas shoppers - ‘ @ , igi in» mild form: Crowd polsoning.| * = ps ; 22 ~. =r * . i 5 : a : 5 PA | 3 x 2 a < = Crowd poisoning takes two com- . Ta ry ne op ; \ - sr my War pcr hin art AUT Ct a Lh SR LR lin Vs as eis Bedny A Crowded 5 ed : 7 Aol tehaitindy aida og forma--the hody “shay -Harst BE 0) = = rs i 4: * a » + Seteeie See AT hfe I i nett een : a ir as br L lout In excessive heat, causing = set SOIR Salle : : ; 7. ; pray © 7 {swoon, Or it may turn toa cold A : > : : 4 : a . "0 sno Cl s : : #7, “ . or cariemERl Gl EA mn : IN THE last hours of darkness of : goth : a : : . . | the second night the Japanese sent] : §é J : ys = : Pr A : Sale oh down a new word to Cmdr. Ports, : ee Tra ae We : aie aw In the aft hold Bridget an- : : : : ; es : nounced it: “Good news, boys! : EF: ¥ ; yr J : \ : We're going to be put ashore here.” : : nt x Be nm ulard with v - ga s the Japanese did not forget : : : lining a : i. special stipulations before . . . “ir.50 5, : Fa PML : releasing the Americans frum the Whenever anything strikes a returning Gl as ee 1 ) RH {ship, where nearly s hundred had A, ‘i tpg i" fof wan : stfol slumber— 1 Tae” asamers migni tas ‘hat favorable—nhe is apt to say "It's a Good Deal.” It forw re slum a : . wo ly : when i chilly— pane dud shirts. But they oud may refer to suggestions for an evening s get ren : : for Juste kit and coonten. ]. Co together—it may relate to some legal or general ¥ ig Japanese were sure that barefooted : ohio ope o ‘ . 4 Americas could not go far if they proposition directed to his welfare—it may . ; ; ™ stienipted to escape. SLL "og : “ha st RX “a — ; relate to a trip or a job—"It's a good deall! A ! : | THE OROYKU MARU was almost . le h : : | i a 20 yards And—we think he would consider—without : Chiet Clarence M. Tay- : : : 1 ; net Sostevain Cleeuee . Tose : stuttering—that the buying of Victory Bonds—is : 25 men up past the Japanese guns — — | i 2B San 9p DAK the. npencss. guns a good—good—GOOD deal! I crew. w . | Pr io Tava the aur 19 Good—to bring our armed forces home / Sexi Hlehoats. hess were. signg ¥ Good-—to provide mustering out pay ’ } v . y, ‘ F fags nt fi says Taylor, “1 ¥ Good—in taking care of our wounded in the hospitals—and 3 os looked up and saw 13 American \ for their rehabilitation : ; : [ger cubes Thay, Vere “oir v¥ Good—for reconstruction loans to our allies—and to provide i : Fh gina ao : funds for contract settlements : 0 nt 2 i Fy prisoners, Hie San, 10 hares "It's a Good Deal’ —as.a personal investment. : : b -|from the rail to shove off. Taylor It's the surest investment on the face of the earth — back of bonds hn fr > are the integrity and the limitless resources of the U.S. A,

.L. STRAUSS AND COMPANY, INC.—~"INDIANAPOLIS, ae SL TT THEAHEART AO

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