Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 6 December 1945 — Page 2
——At the same-time; Gen: said, he put pressure on the CurtissWright ‘Corp. at Buffalo, N. Y., for delivery of more new P-40 planes. Fifty of them were sent on a carrier from San Diego on March 15, 1041. . £4 : The great problems at the time,
Gen. Marshall said, was how to|
develop an army, get materiel to the
vlieii He uriderfock to augment the
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Philippines, “which had absolutely ™ =
"_ nothing,” strengthen Panams, and meet commitments to Britain,
Fleet Protection Important Er
Because protection of the fleet | at Hawaii and the Philippines ‘was such an important part of the army's task, Gen. Marshall said he let the navy decide largely the priority on distribution - of planes and anti-aircraft guns. - —Examination-of -Gers-Marshall by] Mr. Mitchell brought out that defense of the fleét at: Hawaii was ope of the major concerns of the time. ‘Mr. Mitchell introduced cor-
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Little Jerry Rutz's sorrowful plight brought a flow of sympathetic. telephone calls from throughout the city to his parents at 3318 S. East st. today and last night.. Many of the ‘callers said they were praying for the 3-year-old boy
Mr. and Mrs. James Ruts are praying for a miracle . . . the deliverance of their Jerry from a-fatal malady.
£ 2 : tiations, reports said. ¥F 1:11] Herald said one L will support a ni trade conference : : March to obtain : ET tion in trade ba: Terms of Aid to British 10| pirat Britis < |agreement was Be Announced. Et (Continued From Page One) i. en ‘ the loan will carry an interest rate terity in Britain ofperoent. - ~~ lworld divide After the formal agreement ing economic blocs. signed, it must be ratified by both The Daily Herald congress and the house of commons. |, "SoC Spirited opposition Was exXpectsd In| ["ooring of in : tive ; . to Spat and former consul generaliof peers. In TE he iomed ihe Goodland. Authoritative sources said there| The Daily Sketch said the loan|,; ghangtal. He is the owner of|United States. He formed his first Survivors are his wife, Mrs, 8o« were two parts ‘to the loan. The|assured Britain of a vastly more/one of the world’s finest collections cabinet in 1037. Subsequently|phia Welk: three brothers, Amel main part totals about $3,750,000 | comsortable winter and stood as afof Chiness jade and one of the|Konoye headed cabinets in 1940 and|Welk of Two Harbors, Minn: Wile 000. It will be “new money” used) for promoters of the three power pact,|1041 when war preparations were at|liam Welk and John W potential Magna Carta the ! elk, both of to prime Britain's creaking eco- ” He is believed to be still in Madrid. |the highest pitch in Kankakee, Ill, and two sisters, Mr8, nomic pumps at 3 per cent interest.| world. Shigeo Odate, former chief of Kido 18°6 sthndeon af Hein Kido, aan aeconey od uo sisers, Ms. A subsidiary loan of $650,000000( “It is/ planned that Britain and|military sdminjstration at Singa-|leader of the Meiji restoration, He Mrs. Louise Long of Griffith, was included in the agreement, re-| the United States will go ahead to-|pore and later governor of greater|was education minister in the first ports sald, to pay for -American| gether taking the world lead ecos|Tokyo and home minister. Konoye cabinet and ister held thel ERIDAY RITES SET . lend-lease goods enroute or €on-| nomically in peace as they did mili-| Viscount Masatoshi Okochi, for-|welfare and home ministries. He ata tracted for when the war ended.|tarily in war,” the Sketch added. [mer president of the chemical in-|was sppeintsd, lord keeper of the] FOR TRAFFIC VICTIM The interest rate on this part was The agreement was understood [dustry combine, and a leading fig-| privy seal in June, 1040. Services for Isaiah Jeter, fatally reported to be 3% per cent. to have resulted finally when ure in wartime production. . injured in s trafic crash Saturday Final Payment in 2001 Britian yielded to American de-| Count Tadomase Sekai, a lead- MRS, BERTHA ALKIRE [night win ve neld at 1p. m. tomer, The political correspondent of | mands for liberalisation of her ing member of the house of peers RITES TOMORROW row in the Mt. Paran Baptist church, the London Daily Herald, organ of sterling ares restrictions, which and a former president of the : the Rev. C. H. Dell officiating. Mr, th caid the British |mited American ability to trade Japan agricultural association, who Mrs. Bertha Catherine Alkire,| jeter was 50. ie labor party, at will in areas where the pound promoted farm production during 3708 W. 10th st, an Indianapolis| , cuard at the, Electronics a government has been informed that|geriing is the medium of ex- [the war, resident four years, died Tuesday in| ianoratories, Mr. Jeter lived at 2001 NN congress will pe kept in session to|exchange - Taketora Ogata, a farmer editor | Methodist hospital. Boulevard pl. He was a native of - NN ratify the loan while parliament is| Convinced Cabinet of Asahi, a Tokyo morning news- Mrs. Alkire, who was 56, was &/ jasper Tex, and was a world war § FB passing the Bretton Woods inter- sir Ed Bridges ent | POPE, president of the Japaness|native of Dans, Ind, and a member veteran, belonging to the Harpold T-e natiohal monetary fund biti, | Sir Edward 8... perman information : and later|of the Fairfax Christian chureh. |nose 341 of the American Dispatches said that first repay- undersecretary of the British trea- minister without portfolio. He was| Services will be held at 2 p. m.| He was a member of the Mt. Paran ments of} $s Yours ill be Pumtpuned sry Who made 3. huiivieg Sight So ai Sifuetial Hniber of She Black JOmoeOw IA ie ude funeral) gapntist church. until 1951, giving Britain five years wochincton last w ;ald [Dragon society. home burial be in Floral| gurvivors are five brothers, Zack, Mrs. Rutz to pray with her inlof grace to get her artioaliyl” (inguin last wel tas said Surrender by Dec. 16 Park cemetery, Ber art on C.F dtr of Orta church. strained economy going again, Final |The nine whose names were pub-| Survivors are her husband, Wil-|1ex : Chester of Bessmay, Tex. and Several want to send toys. {repayment will be in the year 2001./they must yield on the sterling |jished today must surrender either|liam H. Alkire; two gaughters, Mrs. Wesley of Jasper, Tex.; and two sise American Airline employees at| A further concession from usual question or abandon the entire loan |i, the Sugamo or Omori prisons by|Leland Hitch of Lizton, Ind, and| ters Mrs. Ophelia of Besse Weir Cook airport offered to supply [loan procedure was-sald to be an project. midnight Dec. 16. Oshima and Suma A or da. Tare of Indian | man, Tex., and Mrs. Carmills Sime “all the blood needed" if it would arrangement whereby Bri will] A British United Press dispatch |yil) be taken into custody as soon|apolis; two Terry H. Alkire of | mons of Jasper. help Jerry. ern “|not be required to pay any in-|from Washington predicted that|as they reach Japan. : |. Wayne, and Harry L. Alkire of| The body is at the Morgan mottue Mrs. Rutz said his physician had|terest in years when she has an congress will be told than an An-| There have been numerous de- | Indianapolis; three brothers, Albion|qry told her it would be “dangerous” to|adverse balance of trade. An im-|glo-American credit agreement mands both in Japan and abroad|Terry of Dana; Dr. Roy Terry of| =~ ooo oo give Jerry any more blood trans-|partial board will determine when alone can enable the United States|for the arrest of Konoye and Kido. | Pasadena, Cal, and Elmer Terry of D-DAY PIGEONS fusions. She said her son had spent this applies, to haye. free trade in the world. |Konoye in particular has been the|Evansville, Ind.; three sisters, Mrs. WASHINGTON—A “force” of 540 {a “restless night” and complained] The United States pressed hard| Rejection of the agreement would {target for editorial criticism in|Mollle Cox of Clifford,’ N. D.; Mrs.|carefully trained homing pigeons frequently of pains in his legs. for liberalization of British empire (see war-tjme trade restrictions re-| newspapers and in the diet| Pearl Cox and Miss Della Terry,/was included in the Normandy ine pointing out that he is equally guilty| both of Long Beach, Cal. vasion,
Jerry was stricken with malignant trade restrictions during the nego-!main throughout the world, leutropenia three weeks ago. He : was taken to Methodist hospital where his condition was diagnosed as virtually incurable. The disease results in deficiency of white corpuscles.
Jenner Te
(Continued From Page One)
some new links, notably labor, to the party's backing. The state chairman declared that only the Republican y has the “abiding faith” m competitive enterprise necessary to future prosperity and security, He expressed
party never would get the opportunity: to demonstrate that quality. - Charging the “Truman-New Deal”
porting fo show that government spending never has brought with it a proportionate increase in employment. The program of underwriting employment, he said, must inevitably lead to regimentation and
Enlarging on the need for a party appeal to labor, he said: “Instead of treating labor with a policy of passive appeasement, while watching
‘Recognize Labor's Gains,
Pro=| 4ignity of opportunity for leader-
LY
lls Republicans
a combination of power-politics and social upheaval, we must recognize labor's full equality with eapital and management and be prepared to accord her the full dignity and oppor. tunity that her contribution to our national life rightly demands.” Second prerequisite to the party's return to national power, he said, is recognition “that the Negro in America has suffered more and enjoyed less security than any group in our nation, “This,” he declared, “we must remedy, not by charity, but by the
ship and self-improvement." Hits Tax Program In point three, Mr. Jenner urged the party not to lose sight of the fact that the rights of all groups || are balanced by responsibilities. For his fourth point he charged that “war-time taxes are designed
enterprise and “result in jobs without burden to the public treasury.”
her gain her legitimate ends through
'WIDE SEARCH MADE
FOR LOST BOMBERS
(Continued From Page One). what happened to five
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-1day's confab. Spite. the army are also said to be among | The search for them perhaps was
, | court action, also contended Bauer |
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OFFICIALS CONFER ON BALERS CASE
‘(Continued From Page One) reportedly was held up pending to- |
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_ Terms of Bauer's discharge from ||
subjects hashed over at today'si} meeting. Mazelin, in his federal|
was held in violation of the army rule granting release to men over 38. Meanwhile, Bauer's fiery, brunete | wife, waiting in their apartment at] 1533 Carrollton ave. for word from the fort, hoped the session would pjoduce her husband's freedom. Hf “He may be home today,” she} said, : ’
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Clark was recognizance bond. The Ur
School chil have entered . the Victory be sults are proc School 81,
