Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 2 September 1940 — Page 3

MONDAY, SEPT. 2, 1940

+ BRITISH BEAT OFF 3 BOMBER WAVES; GERMANY RAIDED

Berlin, Munich, Northern Italy and French Ports Are Targets; Press Warns London |

To Expect Intensified Attacks. (Continued from Page One) |

ratio of German losses to two and one-half to one, compared with four and five to one earlier. | In the week ended Saturday night the Germans were credited with a loss of 298 planes and 700 men compared with 128 planes and 110 men for the British. Saturday totals were placed at 85 German planes, 37 British planes with 25 British pilots safe. The Sunday figures were 25 German planes, 15 British planes, nine pilots safe. Prime Minister Winston Churchill praised the action of | British airmen in returning to England with their bomb loads when they are prevented by weather or other factors from dropping them on their targets and contrasted this with the German attack on the Seaside resort at Ramsgate where he said the Germans had destroyed 1000 homes and | shops in an indiscriminate attack. | Children on Torpedoed Ship Safe | The torpedoing of a British ship on which 320 children | were being taken to Canada was revealed. None of the | children was lost. Reports said that they took to the life-| boats singing “Roll Qut the Barrel” and “Oh Johnny.” They! were said to be eager to start again for Canada. Berlin disclaimed any knowledge of the affair. In Rumania there were indications that the Transylvania dispute between Rumania and Hungary might not | be settled peacefully despite the Axis award of half the | to Hungary. Bucharest reported that Hungarian | who were to have occupied the ceded territory in two | marched across the border today. It was reported at Cluj, the capital of Transylvania, that nine Rumanian gendarmes were killed or wounded by the advancing | Hungarians and that Rumanian troops were marching up| “to keep order.” | The Axis Powers warned Rumania to quiet her populace, d troops were postea on all the street corners of Bucharest and Cluj. Transylvanian peasants, almost in revolt, were awaiting the return of their leader, Jules Maniu, who transfer. High Command claimed a submarine had destroyers in the North Sea.

had

{

g 1 |

nN

is protesting the The German two British |

ill Second Year of Battle | See Determination of War?

|

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Sunk

WwW

{Continued from Page One) 1 while establishing Italian communi- | cations to Bast Africa, including! Ethiopia and captured British Somaliland Military experts believe that the Fascist offensive in Aftica will be on several fronts (and may include a move against Greece) and will be co-ordinated with the most intense phase of German attack on Great Britain. In addition to the Libyan front, Italian forces would be expected to move against the AngloEgyptian Sudan in a drive around Egvpt to Ethiopia and to advance farther into British Kenya Colony, a rich field to the south. The British port of Aden, oppo-! site Somaliland, presumably would be prime Fascist objective (espe-| cially for air attack) not only be-| cause of its strategic importance along the sea wav to Suez, but because it would give Mussolini a toehold in Asia and further his dream of becoming protector of Islam | Success or failure of the war program of the Axis Powers both in Europe and in Africa will depend on the ability of the British to hold ground until they can coun-ter-attack (especially in the rir) in great force and until the effects of naval blockade pinch the Nazi-Fas-cist war machine, probably a vear hence

British Raid Damage Disputed

British counter-bombardment so far has been steady but on a smal}| scale compared to the German mass attacks on Britain. Tts effective-|

experts regard French bases as if not impossible strength is an army supply iod. British 3 concentrated along he Channel would be in a position

tremendous blows an

extreme as long not broken would

| { 11

mean \ finit

\ inde

i

at at

the Germans could ericr air forces irom Norway and might divide the British air power and thus maintain nance in the skies to protect landings and supply lines.

C sup ies—France, once, the

Ireland—

Watch Move Toward Ireland a

move in the direction indicate a change of Ww as sensational an occupation of Scan-

Thus, a Nazi

woul

as

’)

dinavia German of Ireland, howked to a third f the Battie of and counterof the British ( for the Nazi Command alternative tensified serial submarine lockade in order to starve out the) itish or to h them by a combination of ation and constant, | destructive rial bombardment Irish bases would be of utmost im-| portance in either event But in the qu power would be of perhaps decisive

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| the children

{were standing ba

| 14 | managed | reached port.

ling feature was that | not

a

oa

including all passengers and its crew.

320 CHILDRE

ON SHIP SAVED Called for Service Sept. 6 PLA

No Indiana Units in First Group to Start Year's Training: Other Calls Due in October, November, December.

P) ~War pared today to induct 60.500 National Guardsmen from 26 states into |

Sing ‘Oh Johnny’ as Boats Are Lowered Inte Rough Waves of Sea.

{Continued

WASHINGTON. 2 (U

Sept the Army Sept. 16 for one vear of t

from Page One) President Roosevelt issued the ca

| l 1 cordite shells failed children | ‘We expected pandemonium,” said | C. H. Hindelv. a schoolteacher in charge of the children “But the children behaved magnificently. They donned their life belts, which were ready at their bedsides

acrid fumes of to frighten the Law which he sighed Tuesday The first guardsmen called for! service will be the vanguard of the preparedness army of 1.200.000 soldiers planned by the high com-| mand. Under the law the guards-| men can be used for service any{where in the United States, its ter-] ritories or possessions, including the | | Philippines dication any of the men called would be sent bevond the limits of | continental United States { Mr. Roosevelt announced that he! plans to increase the 60,500 called for Sept. 16 to 76,689—the full peace-time strength-—by voluntary enlistment as soon as possible, Recruiting Drive Likely |

‘Roll Out the! The citizen-soldiers, many of as the Whom have just completed intenhad | sive war games, will be drawn from: North Caro-

and conformed strictly with the training which thev had practiced faithfully since the ship had sailed.” “They behaved like seamen, even the smallest of them.” said the ship captain. The youngest Was Six~-weeks-old Dutch child When the captain abandon ship, the childre the boats in perfect order a scream or sob. They seemed regard their experience as an venture, it was said They began singing Barrel’ and “Oh Johnny” lifeboats into which they | stepped were lowered from the da-|New York, New Jersey vits to the sea lina, Tennessee, South ryt . Zn 3 Georgia, Oklahoma, Arizona, ew SensieR? Just Sing Lowder Mer Colorado, Washington, The sea was rough and many of Jauho. ‘Oregon. Montana, Wyoming. ( became sea-sick The New Hampshire, Delaware, Illinois, ups it was Said, only Increased | yrissouri Massachusetts. Pennsyl- | y [ their sing : Pree ® rd 8 : { ue TE eT ships | Vania, California, Muine, Connect:The ‘older ‘chil-| Cut: Virginia and Arkansas 3 3 . ; { The work of assembling the dren clambered up rope ladders.) oo aemen will ‘remain ‘the job of The vounger ones were hauled up by - Mcinls—since the guard is ropes in improvised slings and bas- oni ing TAR militia antil the Hs, x bl members are inducted into the FedOtiw Sneunyes wi eral service. During the next two gathered whatever clothes they weeks guardsmen below the rank could and tried to provide some of captain will be permitted to re-| comforts for the destitute children. | oo * if they have dependents or hi ae 1 > PANY Fie , . C DN | to feed them until it! industry, and state officials may re-| cruit their organizations to full peace strength. | The 60,500 figure mentioned by Mr. Roosevelt in his mobilization proclamation refers to the main-| tenance strength at which the] wash Guard has hitherto operated. An| When the children landed yester-| intensive recruiting drive to bring day crowds awaited them, some of ihe ynits to the 76,689 figure is an- | the men and women weeping Some ticipated during the next two weeks {

a decided to hoarded without to acd- |

3 1

the rescue ships

Save Water—Don’'t Wash The greatest hardship was lack of | water, witnesses said, but one savthe bovs did

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES Scene of Nation's Worst Air Disaster

will bring all available members of the Guard into the Army a few months—Ilate yesterday under the National Guard Mobilization

importance So far, ‘German att to nullify the British Navy have been inde-

empts

Sill

counter-block- |

ly partly effective. lanes and U1 ichtening of the it could be complete masterv were established

Second Vital Theater

ital theater +

war the

of IS

secona vo the British Empire the Suez Canal to Italy's attack on the Empire in North Africa are Suez Canal and Gibraltar mean the cutting of Britain's - gular vein. Every move I Benito Mussolini's w Roman empire around the Mediterranean must be judged by jts effect on those two strongholds, both of which have been bombed by Italian planes Most important Africa runs slong the frontier of Libva and Egypt, where Italian armies have made vast preparations for an offensive that would be desiecned to gain control of the Suez Canal and thus isolate British forces in the Near East and

The against battle of The k Brit tne tent, would

Fascist

success

front in North

to a lesser ex-|

bid |

in Africa |

ness is disputed, but British officials that German supplies have vastly reduced and that synthetic gasoline production in the Reich has been cut 40 per cent. When and if these British attacks on Germany in Libya, increase in range and in-

ns

been

ISU

tensity the real struggle to seize the

| offensive will be underway. The struggle in the coming vear

will not be confined to present mili-|

tary fields. Diplomatic and economic battlefields (which are potential military fronts) already extend over all of Europe. The British are closely watching the French Government at Vichy for signs of a declaration of war against Britain and many Britons believe that the Axis Powers will make every effort to force Spain into the conflict if a big-time offensive is launched against raltar Greece already has felt the threat of Italian invasion from Albania. If the Fascists seek to seize vital Greek naval certainly will be fighting in the Aegean Sea and attempting to bring into effect the British-Turkish mutual aid pact in the eastern Mediterranean

IN INDIANAPOLIS

Here Is the Traffic Record DEATHS TO DATE County City 24 3 -“~ we 3D 56 —Aug. 31—Sept. 1— . 64 | Accidents... .. . 2 | Arrests oh AY TRAFFIC COURT Cases Convic- Fines tried tions paid 1 1 $5 2 1

Total 1939 6

1940 86

64

Injured 79

Pead....... SATURD Violations Speeding Teckless driving ,ailure to stop at ~ through street ». Disobeying traffic signal Drunken driving. All others ..

9 9 15

21 15

$66

caves

11 2 23 28

Totals serosa

10/

| MEETINGS TODAY Indiana State Fair, Fairgrounds, all day. American Radio League, 7:30 p. m.. Hotel | Washington

Omicron Pi Sigma | Hotel Washington.

| |

|

| i i

national convention,

MEETINGS TOMORROW

Rotary Club, Claypool Hotel, noon. Alpha Tau Omega, Board of Trade. noon. Gvre Club, Spink Arms Hotel, noon Mercator Club, Hotel Lincoln, noon Universal Club, Columbia Club, noon i _ University { Trade, noon Knight of Columbus, K. of C. clubhouse, noon Lutheran Service Club, Canary Cottage, { noon Fine Paper Credit Group. Wm. H. Block Co., noon

|

| Lion | Hotel. Al Was.

s Club Board. 6:30 p. m., Claypool

7 p. m., Hotel

ha Delta Omega, hington. 2

and Italy, as well as|

Gib- |

bases Britain almost |

of Michigan Club. Board of!

children who had been ili before | Next Call Due Oct. 15 their ship was torpedoed were] : tC " . wrapped in blankets and taken to Mobilization of the guard units hospitals. Even thev waved, smiled | Will keep abreast of the schedule the

o —“

and gave the traditional British Previously set out by the military ‘thumbs up” sign that all was weil | Authorities in their drive to man as thev were driven away in am- | the $10.000,000,000 armament probulances. Some girls still clutched | 8am. That schedule provided: dolls they had rescued Sept 15—Mobilization of 55.000 or | The children were taken to hotels | more National Guardsmen to man | 'and halls and townspeople, includ-| certain vital units including coast ing children as well as men and artillery and observation squad-] women, were soon there to offer ons. (This plan was extended to clothing, comforts and money. '60,500 men under yesterday's | Tt was understood that the tor. |Orders. : | pedoed ship could be saved and that | Oct. 15—An additional 55,000 Na- | the children’s kits which they left|tional Guardsmen who will be Sup-| aboard were undamaged. |plemented—if legislation is passed | in time—by 75,000 drafted trainees.| : : Nov. 15—65.000 to 70.000 National No Ship or Children, Guardsmen together with 65,000 Just Hoax, Says Nazis conscripts who would fill out x Sty . [guard units called in October. BERLIN, Sept. 2 (U. P.). — Au-{" pa. 140000 guardsmen and thoritative German sources today | nerhaps 100.000 conscripts to fill charged the British story of the out the November-called guard sinking of a chilrden’s refugee ship |ynits and form new units. was 8 hoax “worse than the Athenia| Army officials anticipated little case” designed “exclusively for trouble in assimilating the new United States consumption.” ltroops. While a full complement | “There probably never was any of mechanized equipment such as| ship nor any children,” they said. [tanks was not expected at the opening of the mobilization, Gen. WILL NEW FILM CURE George C. Marshall, Army chief of | HOLYWOOD DIVORCE? staff, previously reported that the | « [Army was ready to handle as many | HOLLYWOOD, Sept. 2 (U. P.).— | as 300,000 recruits by Sept. 1. The American Institute of Family | 22,000 Expected to Resign Relations looked forward today to | reconciliations among many of the| Gen. Marshall explained that 60 estranged married couples it sent rifles, clothing, quarters and rato view a preview of the motion ons Would be wiailuble by. that 3 & ¢ 7 ’ { re ’ . irr BH DOr span {HrOUEH the initial training period | preview” at Reno, Nev., the divorce intended to harden them prior to capital, recently, Mrs. Clyde Pang. {10S Welinics] WE BR ping born, who had sued her flier hus-| o.oo r band for divorce, wept in the the. | *ipmen heavy War Department | ater, then withdrew her complaint | sane for clothing Det and | ind Bein her husband to fly tenting have indicated that the : Army was preparing in advance When a preview was scheduled |for the new increments ‘Saturday night in Hollywood, Dr.| 1n addition to increasing the Paul Popenoe, head of the Institute | units to peace strength, state of- | ‘of Family Relations, suggested that |ficials will be charged with the reevery estranged couple on the insti- placement of officers under the tute’s list view the picture. Dr. rank of captain and of all enlisted | | Popenoe plans to interview the cou- men who take advantage of the| |Ples and learn the results from the opportunity to resign. For the en- | first attempt to use motion pictures tire guard this is expected to total {in bringing marital peace. 22,000 men,

'

{in a head-on collision

PAGE 3

Department officials preraining l1—the first of a series that probably within

ATH TOLL

HOLIDAY DE

ALREADY PAST 200

(Continued from Page One)

a bathhouse on the Atlantic N. J., boardwalk

Here is the wreckage of the P. C. A. airliner which crashed near Lovettsville, Va., Saturday, Killing 2

But there was no in-|10,000 gallons of water crashed on air travel fatality in City, |

| |

J persons,

N 60,500 National Guardsmen SEEK CLEW T0

NE TRAGEDY

McCarran to Demand Action By Colleagues: Raps Transfer of CAA.

(Continued from Page One)

|

| | | |

continued as an independent agency | this crash would not have occurred “I will go before the Senate this week with a resolution urging a full investigation, not only of ‘the cause: of the crash but of the new Civil Aeronautics Board and its laxity in enforcing air safety regulations It was the first crash transfer of the CAA,

|

since 1S 17 months said the reor-

hrough with

i 1

the

Senator McCarran ganized CAB was shot confusion and political con-

[ “chaos

Three hundred were left homeless trol.’

by floods caused when dams burst at Grenlock and Blackwood, N. J Twenty-five homes were swept away and others were inundated Joseph Leonard Nt and brother, Michael, fatally each other in a shooting which cli-

maxed a family quarrel at Athens, O A 36-vear-old fisherman who caught a three-pound bass in Lake Marie near Antioch,

his wounded

heart attack. Rain which many states was expected to keep the number of highway fatalities below the usual Labor Day week-end figure Automobile associations reported that traffic was slightly below normal John P. Green, 95-vear-old Negro dean of the Cleveland bar and author (while a member of the Ohio Senate) of Ohio's Labor Day legislation, was Killed when he stignbled and fell in front of an auto, on the eve of the holiday he created.

Indianapolis Escapes Serious Accident

Indianapolis escaped serious traffic accident week-end, despite the heavy State Fair and Labor Day holiday traffic Two local persons died of traffic and

fell on

without

over the

injuries received earlier Six persons were Killed in accidents outside Marion County One Hoosier was killed in a Kansas crash The dead: FRED LEE RICHARDSON SR 52, of 626 Dorman St., died yesterday in City Hospital of injuries re-

automobile

ceived Aug. 13 when the automo- | bile in which he was riding was in- |

volved in a collision at Nordyke Ave. and York St. ROBERT COX, 18, R. R 204, died yesterday at the Robert W. Long Hospital of injuries received last Friday when his motorcycle collided with an automobile at 42d St. and Fall Creek Parkway HERMAN KORLIN, 51, Hammond, killed almost instantly vesterday when the automobile in which he was riding was involved on Road 41 Snyder in

13, Box

just north of County. VICTOR POEHLER, ington, killed Saturday

a5, night

Huntwhen

he was thrown from a motorcycle Carson

against an automobile near Larwill in Whitley County. CHARLES BOWMAN, 30, quartermaster at the U. S. Naval Training Station at Great Lakes, Ill., died Saturday at Valparaiso of injuries received a few hours earlier his car plunged from the highway about 10 miles west of Valparaiso. WILLIAM PIKE JR. 14, Montpelier, O., killed in an automobile collision yesterday near Ft. Wayne on U. S. 24 Six-month-old baby of Nr. and Mrs. Clifford Kelly, Mishawaka, killed yesterday when the car driven by Mr. Kelly left the highway near Mentone and crashed into a tree. MRS. CORRINE SIEBERT, 42, Downers Grove, Ill, killed yesterday when two automobiles crashed head-on near Valparaiso on Road 6 WILLIAM D. TERRILL, 2:

wd,

Brazil, school teacher, killed yester- | : {by its diligence had brought about

day near Manhattan, Kas., when his automobile struck a cattle truck. The local deaths brought the total number of persons killed in Indianapolis so far this year to 56 and the total for Marion County to 86.

I1l., became so excited he collapsed and died of a|

a |

Lake |

when |

|

|

CARB Air Safety Board, aided bv si attached to the office Aeronautics Administr ined bit bv bit the pieces metal that once were an ¢ liner, What happened in the 10 minutes between the time the pilot last reported his position and the blinding smash of the giant plane, with gasoline, into field, was conjecture Officials preferred the theory that the violent wind and rain storm that must have caught the plane in its furious grip was the principal the accident They dis reports the ship had or exploded in midair doubtful it could have lightning. They destewardess had few minutes be-

£1¢

Ol

ato

\

] 0 1

+ ne i ye RT 4

cause of continued caught fire and wore been struck by nied that the dropped a note fore the crash It was impossible to determine, they said, whether the ship's landing gear was down, but it appeared that the landing flaps were not extended and that the throttle was wide open at the moment of impact. Estimates of the plane's speed were between 300 and 350 miles an hour.

a

Watches Set Time

The nose of the ship plowed out a 20-foot wide crater, Its tail [snapped over like a whip and scattered luggage and wreckage for varas Watches worn by victims set the time at 2:41 p. m. Saturda: A blinding rain prevented removal the bodies until 3:30 a. m. yesterday Daybreak revealed complete devastation Broken shoes, hand bags, women's dresses and broken bodies were scattered over the field, (which by then had been trampled {under the feet of thousands of curious. Bodies of the 25 victims including that of Senator Lundeen, veteran {midwestern liberal and isolationist, were carried to the tiny chapel in Union Cemetery at Leesburg, Va, 16 miles away. A squad of Federal Bureau of Investigation fingerprint experts with field equipment arrived and established identity of most of the victims present or former government emplovees, from their files. One of the passengers was an FBI agent,

Views Daughter's Body

Of

|

Friends and relatives were urged not to look at the bodies. Edward of Pittsburgh, father of Stewardess Margaret Carson, ine | sisted on seeing his daughter's body. He was led to one end of the chapel and officials turned back the oil cloth covering over one of the vice tims. He paled and turned away Capt. J. H. Carmichael, PCA vice president, said the pilot, Lowell Scroggins, was one of the line's veterans and had flown the route for the last 11 years He noted that this was the first fatal crash PCA has had in its entire 13 years of operation. Harlee Branch, CAB member, assigned Fred Glass, CAB attorney, to hold public hearings, to start late this week or early next. Parts of the wreckage were shipped to Washington and Pittsburgh for detailed study. “A year ago,” said Senator Mc-

(Carran in announcing his intention

to seek a Senate inquiry, “the CAA,

{a condition in American air travel,

unsurpassed anvwhere in the world.

{It had brought to the people a con-

fidence in air travel. “All this has been destroyed.

HURRICANE GOES

American |

Civil |

a Virginia grass |

SEAWARD AFTER BATTERING N. J.

All but Few New England Points Will Escape | Storm’s Fury.

One Year Ago

By UNITED PRESS

German planes bombed Warsaw seven times in 24 hours Egypt ordered general mobilization. German Navy announced bombing of fortifications and port of Hela and Gdynia, and sinking of Polish torpedo boat Germany) notified Sweden and Norway their territorial integrity would be respected if thev observed strict neutrality

| |

By UNITED PRESS hurricane which feared might visited

A tropical au thorities had the devastation England by a years ago passed seaward about 60

miles southeast of Nantucket Island

repeat New two

upon

similar storm

early today. The course taken by the storm indicated that all but a few New England points would escape the high winds boiling out from the hurr | cane center, but emergency meas- | ures were taken from New York to | the tip of Maine lest the disturbance turn back toward shore. The disturbance, attended by winds of 30 to 57 miles-an-hou velocity Left Nantucket drenched [with rain as it passed slowly on in the direction of the Bay of Fundy, | to the north northeastward |

Surf Batters Nantucket

A high surf battered the Nantucket Island shore, but no serious property damage was expected and forewarned residents were reported safe in their battered homes Storm warnings were from New Haven, Conn, to the Delaware Breakwater, but residents of the Cape Cod area were told to expect winds of about 50 miles an hour on the extreme eastern shore. Warnings were flashed to vessels in the storm's path The change in the course left New Jersey {damaged seriously by week-end storms There, flood waters burst dams in southern and central New Jersey, inundated large sections of five counties and east of {Camden and left three persons dead and much property damaged.

1000 Families Evacuted

taken down

hurricane’s the ony state

south

i | | | Rhode Island, where damage was extremely heavy two vears ago as a {result of gigantic tides which swept {up Narragansett Bay, reported nea normal conditions, Bay waters were only an inch above thier usual level, (rain was light and the wind velocity was about 20 miles an how Similar conditions prevailed elsewhere on the New England coast although police, National Guardsmen, the Red Cross, the Coast Guard and [other agencies remained vigilant | More than 1000 families were evacuated from Charlestown R. I. coastal vessels remained in shelter and a number of vacationists left Cape Cod and other resort points on the Rhode Island, Connecticut and Massachusetts coasts

| | |

BOY OF 14 SUFFERS GOUT SPDNEY, Australia, Sept. (U P.) ~The Sydney University Medical Journal of Australia is making much ado about a boy of 14, who has the gout. None of his relatives ever had

9

|

himself always have been total abe stainers

TIN SMELTERS INU. S. SPURRED

Three Producers of Stra= tegic Metal Confer This Week in Washington.

WASHINGTON, Sept. 2 (U. P)) == An early move toward establishment of tin smelters in the United States following dis« Western of

Bolivian Se

was expected today closure that Hemisphere's this strategic metai-—all | will confer here this week with dee

three of the

leading producers

{fense officials Two of the tin magnates—Simon Patino and Mauricio Hochschild are in this country The third, Carlos Arvamayvo, is due early this week. If he fails to arrive in time for the conferences agents will rep resent him Eaward H. Stettinius rials co-ordinator of the | Defense Commission, probably participate in the discussions Because this country must on foreign smelters for approxXis mately 99 per cent of its refined tin, national defense officials sider the establishment of refineries in this country of prime importance. At present, there is e commercial tin smote al size in the Western Hemisphere, and that in Argentina Of the 27.886 fore exported in 1938 {for which statistics 73 per cent was treated Of the remainder, 26 per cent Was treated in Germany and Holland The smelting of tin in Bolivia has been tried out but not vers cessfully due the refractory ture of Bolivian tin and the of a cheap fuel supply within country

ENROLLMENT BEGUN IN SAFETY CONTEST

Interfieet

J1 mates National

will

rely

CON=-

only o

0O1'¢ Of 1S

Of

Bolivian laiest vear available,

in England,

tons the

ar

UC Naw lack the

Lo

Safe

vy

) the

Enrollment in the Contest was started today b Safety Committee of the Indianap= | Olis Chamber of Commerce | Jerry Scher of the Kroger Grocery and Baking Co.. chairman {forts will be made to boost the ene rollment above last year when 67 firms and 1491 drivers competed Companies and individuals opw erating one or mone commercial vehicle in and out of Marion County

said efe

i the 1 . py or . " a Meantime five inspectors from the | the gout, and his parents as well as |are eligible to enroll upon payment

of a $2.50 entry fee and 50 cents jadditional for each driver entered,

> S

f 1

r'auss

ays:

| | | |

loaded |

co

7

Look! You

price—get

the garmen

SURE of ta

Worstedse All builds can be

9.75

‘re going to buy a fall suit!

If you're going to pay a moderate

a WEARINGTON

and be SURE!

SURE of the freshness and newness of

t... (in our plan of

merchandising clothes cannot be old)

iloring, of fit and smartness

(The WEARINGTON was born and bred

in quality surroundings)

And you are SURE to be better satisfied

in a Weari

ngton!

h.00

Coverts—

Worsteds one and two trousers

Rough fabrics.