Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 13 March 1941 — Page 13
PAGE 12
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
THURSDAY, MARCH 13, 1941
U.S. Navy in 'Famil I" On Tyndall's Staff SHAKESPEARE HAD avy in Family Quarrel SURRENDERS IN “ a SHORT VOCABULARY
WASHINGTON, March 13 (U. P.). -—The United States Navy, with nothing to shoot at today, appears to be indulging in a family quarrel.
lof our battleships actually fired at |
another one clearly showed that improvements could be made in the construction of gun turrets.”
CHICAGO DEATH
Rear Admiral Samuel M. Robinson, Chief of the Bureau of Ships, told a House appropriations subcommitiee:
‘A recent experiment where one
HUNGARIAN CREDITS ARE ORDERED FROZEN
WASHINGTON. March 13 (U. P.) —President Roosevelt today signed an order freezing all Hungarian credits in the United States.
Questioned about the unhel) “shoot-vour-own-brother” policy, the Admiral declined to name the bat-| tleships involved. nor would he re- | veal the results of the “attack.”
It was the 12th such order that
German-dominated countries Hungarian assets in this country which will be affected by the freezing order total approximately $250.000 in long term credits.
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PS.
| the air was thick with dust.
| has been issued regarding assets of |
| nounced today that he
| man charged with
| 48, Drexel Gardens.
| defense | charges on the grounds that Mr.
| deputies.
Brother Save Ann Appelt Admits | Slaying Wife's Suitor Near Apartment.
CHICAGO, March 13 (U. Walter Appelt, 32-year-old |ance adjuster charged with slaying | Joseph R. Lorenz, his wife's suitor, | surrendered today to state's attoriney’s police. | Accompanied by his attorney, William Scott Stewart.
|
FP Coal
P.).—| insur- |,
Appelt walked |
linto the office of State's Attorney |
| Thomas J. Courtney.
Police had conducted a statewide |
{search for Appelt since last Monday night, when Mr. Lorenz, a 47-year-old chemical engineer, was found | shot to death on a sidewalk near his North Side apartment. Appelts’ brother, Irwin Appelt of Detroit, said his | brother had telephoned him Tuesday from Bloomington, Ill., admitting the slaying. Appelt's attractive, brunet wife, Wanita, 28, told authorities she and Mr. Lorenz had planned to marry when her pending divorce action against her husband was adjudicated.
Feeney Insists On Trying Driver
SHERIFF AL FEENEY anwill take to the Grand Jury the case of a leaving the scene of an accident, even though the charges were dismissed in
' Municipal Court.
The sheriff said he will make this move on the theory that since the State's evidence was not pre-
| sented in court, the man actually
was not tried. The case is that of Earl Staggs, He was arrested at his home after his car is alleged to have struck Mrs. Phoebe Phelps, also of Drexel Gardens, south of Minnesota St. on Lyndhurst Drive, March 1. In Municipal Court, Judge Pro Tem Norman Blue sustained a motion and dismissed
Staggs was illegally arrested by The State presented no evidence.
BOMB IN ISTANBUL CLAIMS 7TH VICTIM
INSTANBUL. (U.P)
Turkey, March 13 The death of Therese Arm-
strong, stenographer in the British {cause of a
has raised
toli
iegation at Sofia, seven the death
to
night's bombing in the Pera Palace 'he Army,
Hotel which occurred just as George W. Rendel, British Minister to Bulgaria., arrived with his staff from Sofia. Ann Rendel, Minister, said today that she “still smelled TNT.” every time she lighted la cigaret.
“I had just left Gertrude Ellis,
'who was killed by the explosion,”
she said. and got half-way up to
(the second floor when the hombs
exploded TI fell down on the stairs |
of me. “I could smell the explosive and There
[was a crater at the bottom of the
stairs and men were pulling screaming women from it. Then I
Police Sergeant!
24. daughter of the
two |
{rushed back up to get my lather. ni
75 TANTALIZING
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U. S. SEEKING SHIPS
OWNED BY CITIZENS
WASHINGTON, March 13 (U.| P.).—~The Maritime Commission plans to enlist the services of foreign flag-ships owned bv Americans to haul strategic materials to the United States, informed officials said today There are 285 such ships of 1.693.- | 205 gross tons operated under the] flags of Great Britain, France, Germay, Italy, Argentina, Belgium, | Cuba, Denmark. Honduras, the! Netherlands, Norway, Panama, and Venezuela. Commission officials are seeking | the voluntary co-operation of nat | American owners, but failing that they are prepared to exert "moral pressure.” Maritime ‘experts estimated that | this country needs at least 60 more merchant vessels to handle the greatly increased trade stimulated by defense efforts.
EX-DRAFT BOARD AID
AND RECORDS HUNTED
PASADENA, Cal, March 13 (U. P.).—Federal Bureau of Investigation agents today sought Kenneth Bruce Roberts, 42, former draft board secretary, who had disappeared with Selective Service Records. A complaint issued by U. missioner
. Com-
| RRS a ——_ Maj. Fred C. Dyer Times Special CAMP SHELBY, Miss., March 13.—Maj. Fred C. Dyer, plans and training officer (G-3) of the 152d Infantry, the staff of Maj. Gen. Robert H. Tyndall, commanding general of the 38th Division and Camp Shel- | by, where the unit is in training. | Maj. Dyers, whose home is at 3509 Kenwood Ave. was, at the time of his induction into Federal service, a department manager of | the Public Service Co. of Indiana. Gen. Tvndall appointed Maj. Dver as supply officer (G-4) on | the Division staff. succeeding | Lieut. Col. John E. Gery, Colfax, Ind., who has been transferred to | the inspector general's depart- | ment.
PLANE DELIVERY 972 FOR MONTH
Drop Evpecied; 879 Go | To Army, Navy and British, OPM Says.
WASHINGTON, March 13 {P.) —Airplane manufacturers livered 972 planes during February {to the Army, Navy, Great Britain,
| other governments and commercial | the Office of Production]
airlines,
{Management announced today. | Deliveries in January were 1036 planes and in December, 799. OPM Director-General William S. Knudsen warned some time ago that production in February would fall behind the January record be“short month.” The OPM said 879 of Navy and British. No mention was made of the remaining 83 planes but it was assumed most of them went "to other governments.” It was believed 40 per cent were trainers and 60 per cent fighting planes. Mr. Knudsen has said American
Operators Suggest Longer Week in Case Of Emergency.
NEW YORK, March 13 (U, P.).—
has been transferred to |
(U.| de- |
the 972, of Tuesdav {planes delivered last month went to
|coal industry today rejected union demands for a $1 a day wage in-
| The vocabulary used by SHaNespea:? Liars, they found.
Operators of the Appalachian soft |
| | | |
{crease and countered with a pro- | Iposal that the current 35-hour work |
| week be
lengthened in the event |
{national defense creates an emer- | |gency demand for a boost in coal |
production. Charls O'Neill, operators, | reservations” the miners’ {unas the 35-hour week be “conceded and extended” for the next two
spokesman for the
| gency demand for coal
whenever it occurs.’ Suggests Renewal In
presenting the operators’
recommendations for a new two-year United Mine Workers of America, affecting 338,- |
contract with the
years but felt that arrangements | | ought to be made to meet an emer“sensibly |
said they accepted “with | proposal |
000 men in the eight-state Appa- |
lachian area and 126,000 elsewhere, | Mr, O'Neill suggested that the 1939- | 40 contract be extended. The operators thus {contract changes proposed by miners, including two weeks
the with
rejected all!
|
pay and a guarantee of 200 work- |
{ing days a year,
and proposed re- |
| tention of the present basic daily |
wage of $6 in the north and $5.60 in the south. As a basis for suggestion when the actual negotiations get under way, the operators recommended Se ap hop 42- hour week in the event
Union Dissatisfied
U. M. W. A. President John L. | Lewis lost no time in expressing the union's dissatisfaction with the operators’ counter proposals. Insisting on the miners’ right to jan the contract improvements de-
| | | | |
| manded by the union and alluding |
to the operators’ reply he snapped: “I say that no proper presentation for a settlement has been proposed.” i ———————— NEGOTIATE ON STRIKE GREENCASTLE, Ind. March 13 (U. P.).—Officials of the American Zinc Products Co. a duPont subsidiary, and 150 employees began negotiations today to end a six-day strike.
BE SMART! (UT LAMORY BILLS WITY NORTHERN BANQUET MAPKINS
| plane production “will pick up by |
| the middle of the summer” and that he “hopes the United States can produce 18,000 planes this year.’ The Government is endeavoring to
produce 33,000 planes by July, 1942: and bits of debris came down on top | —19.000 for the U. S. and 14.000 for |
| the British.
BOARD RULES HARDY
OWES U. S. $75,000
WASHINGTON, March 13
| dian Government $75,753, taxes for 1534 to 1937. Hardy had filed a lengthy appeal with the board, devoting much of it to his marital difficulties with the former Myrtle Lee Reeves, whom he married in 1921 and divorced in 1940 after several separations and reconciliations.
in income
(U.| P.).—The U. S. Board of Tax Ap-| | peals held today that movie comeOliver Hardy still owes the!
a Copyright 1941 Northern Paper Mills
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David B. Head Ri Los |
Angeles charged him with grand]
theft and embezzlement of Government property and records. Draft officials said a package of
records had been returned by mail|
and that thev were being checked | to determine if an if any were missing.
U. S. CONSULATE AT
HAMBURG HIT IN RAID
BERLIN, March 13 (U. P.).— The |
U. S. Consulate at Hamburg was hit by an explosive bomb during the British air attack last night. The bomb pierced the building to the second floor, DNB, official Gersaid,
EVANSTON, Ill, Mar. 13 (U. P.) — lin his writings was only 25 per cen of that of an educated present-day | ladult, according to Dr. Robert H. | Seashore, associate professor of psychology at Northwestern University.
Dr. Seashore and his collabora-|additional words which they could (tor, Miss Lois D. Eckerson, have | have used if necessary, or at least ‘completed seven years’ work on a lunderstood.” vocabulary test. Persons taking the | The - third word on each of the test had an average yocabulary of 1378 pages of Funk and Wagnalls’ about 60,000 words, exclusive of de-| unabridged dictionary was selected rivatives, while Shakespeare used for the test, which was given oy only about 15.000 such words in his more than 500 college students.
| remembered,” Dr.| NO FEES, NO RULES older writers] WELLSVILLE, N. Y. U. P.).—The had a much smaller English | newly formed Fillmore Club has no language to draw from, and that we |dues, fees, rules or formality. It 1 Bnow nothing about the number of meets weekly.
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man news agency, causing damage to the consular office and a hallway. Explosion of the bomb, DNB said, shattered a number of windows over | a wide area. | The U. S. Embassy here confirmed | the DNB report.
CAPTAIN ACCUSES LAVAL QUEBEC, March 13 (U. P.).— Captain Thierry D’Argenlieu, emissary of Gen. Charles De Gaulle, leader of the Free French, charged today that Pierre Laval was negotiating with Germany during the battle of Flanders, weeks before France fell.
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