Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 29 July 1941 — Page 3

TUESDAY, JULY 29, 1941 a ___ ia

CODE SHOWS NAZIS ean To ger URGED PERU WAR," "¥

Standard Oil

Sales After ‘Freeze’ Document Seized by Argentina Establishes German Role Of Assets. In Border Fighting and Bolivian Putsch; GRIER PREG Courts Get Evidence.

The Standard Oil Co. stopped selling oil throughout Japan today

emt S p———

Also Stops

i

By ALDO FORTE United Press Staff Correspondent ROME, July 29.—Premier Benito Mussolini was 58 years old today, but as usual the anniversary passed unobserved, without cakes or candles or even the good wishes of his associates. Still an erect and vigorous figure,

YEE OTANAPOLS TovEe Mussolini, 58 Today, Doesn't Want to Hear About It, Although He Still Stays in Perfect Physical Condition

By ALLEN HADEN

1941, by The Indianapolis Times and The Chicago Daily News, Ine.

Copyright

BUENOS AIRES, July 29

Il Duce makes no concession to the passing years. He never observes his birthday. There is a strict ban

as 40,000 Japanese troops were said to be landing in French IndoChina.

.—With the Argentine authori At the same time American mo-

been

was |

| cratic Leader John W. McCormack. | blow.

I City Bank's Tokvo |

even on family reunions and, in accordance with his wishes, he receives no greetings to remind him of the day. If anything, he tackles his long, arduous daily routine with even more vigor today. Although nearing the 60-year mark, Mussolini is an excellent example of physical fitness, which he attributes to a strict diet, plenty of exercise and hard work. Like Adolf Hitler, II Duce is a vegetarian. He never smokes or drinks liquors. Only when delivering a toast does he sip wine cor champagne. He has a mania for schedules. He rises promptly at 6:30 a. m. daily and after breakfast, which usually consists of fresh fruit, he spends an hour riding horseback in the gardens of his Villa Torlonia on the outskirts of Rome.

this form of exercise helps co-ordi-{nate mind and muscles. At 8:30 a. m. Mussolini leaves for Venice Palace,

Bad for All, Eden Says, Asking U. S. Aid in Rebuilding.

By WILLIAM H. STONEMAN

that at the er Sam Rayburn, and House Demo- Dutch East Indies was a serious Copyright 1M by The Indianapolis Times |

The Chicago Daily News. Inc.

A well-informed administration Japanese concern over the Dutch! LONDON, July 20 If Hitler is than I do today.”

RITISH AIM

lend-lease support of Gen. Charles |

Papers Accuse Roosevelt Berlin newspapers were accusing | President Roosevelt of personal re- | sponsibility for the “forgery” of the| message and that which led Bolivia | to believe that the Bolivian military attache in Berlin, Maj. Elias Belmonte, had plotted with the German Minister in La Paz Ernest Wendler, to overthrow the Bolivian Government. The same papers said that the {Argentine seizure of the diplomatic! "pouches © “further reveals the] methods wherewith Washington's imperialists desire to prepare the! ground in South America for their

|

ties in possession of a secret code message, perhaps the equal tion Jicture companies suspended s . } vv Va AP . _ distribution o merican ov of the famed Luxburg and Zimmer mann papers, found dur (“until the situation is clarified.” ing the last World War, Nazi agents are proved to have standara acted boususe of ie } i i e ing rece fomented the recent Peru-Ecuador frontier battles. | mpossibiliny he Tn 3 Ron p. 5 In face of this discovery by the Congressional commit-| japanese order freezing American - . . . Solas . sf tee which is investigating anti-Argentine activities, Nazi jsut In a uelieved. possible Minister Edmund Freiherr von Thermann is putting up a ac the suspension order might last-ditch fight to salvage Nazi plans to promote war, revo- frsve Jtary; Dentin Otis: Ce . : . 4 ion ) S, lutions and internal strife in South America. | ortage wat expected (6 become He won a hollow victory to-| ——— — ——— | intense immediately. day with the return of the PONDER U S AD on Shegeis diplomatic pouches which 1 Un zation and the daily gasoline, allotcontained the damning docu- ment for August had already been ' reduced to seven gallons. ment, : : viet | | The motion picture order apHe said the pouches ha + parently resulted from the tying “stolen from an airplane with a jie of Tigre Wah two million dol- . >is rest bad : ars ,of the American film comtypical show of Wid West BWip. DO. R, and Advisers Also panies’ deposits with the closing MANES. : Luck | of the Nationa Typed on onionskin paper. the Consider Limited Trade ‘branch, code message was found tucked in- . | 760.000 Tons of Oil side a short wave radio set seized With Japan. ols ite Oo bv the investigating committee's] 4 ~The Tokyo stock market chairman, Raul Damonte Tabordg,! WASHINGTON, July 29 (U. P.). again unsettled. on its smuggled return from Peru —President Roosevelt returned tothe; The Domei News Agency rewhere it was refused entry. The capital today to decide whether to, ported in a Washington dispatch message ordered all Nazi agents in! give lend-lease aid to the Free that Admiral Kichisaburo Nomura, | Peru and Bolivia to follow the in- French and permit limited trade Japanese Ambassador, had ordered | structions issued by four Nazi en- with Japan as long as she refrains) Minister Kaname Wakasug of the | voys at their meeting in Santiago, from further aggression. Embassy staff to return to Japan| Chile, last March. - Mr. Roosevelt was expected to at once to report on the situation. | “Local experts beiieve that the set discuss the Far Eastern situation| The Japanese-sponsored Governwas designed for use not in Lima with Acting Secretary of State ment at Nanking, China, today folbut on the Peru-Ecuador battlefields Sumner Welles soon after he re- lowed Japan and Manchukuo in by Nazi agents communicating with Ee ek she WI oe Tro Itong American and British esta 1arters in Barce- Hyde Park this : [Bs : ‘ | fhe Gassro J Then he will confer with the con- | The Japanese continued to at-| iy gressional “Big Four”—Vice Presi- tempt to belittle Anglo-American | Argentina Is Nerve-Center | dent Henry Wallace, Senate Demo- | freezing of their assets but admitted | The message establishes appar- cratic Leader Alben Barkley, Speak- that the parallel action of the netly beyond doubt, Santiago meeting instructions were issued to create the abortive Bolivian putsch and the Ecuador-Peru battles. Continental ramifications deriving : from the investigating committee's forces miy be made soon. lucky find are not exhausted yet. May Forego Embargo The discovery confirms that Argen- | “If we give them any war matina is the nerve center of espion- | terials directly, instead of through age and subversion in South Amer- {the British, it will be done with the ica. Hence, the Nazis are taking | gouble purpose of putting a little, a last Dutch stand and brazening pressure on Vichy and also to dem-| out the scandal. Sot Be onstrate again that we are willing | oe, rE DS a I help go who 3 against Hit-| S it er.” the Senator said. | international law” and von Ther-| ge said that support of this sort mann’s notes to the Argentine For- .ou1d not be considered tantamount) eign Office demanding the return |, recognition of a French govern: | of the seized pouches. For, if the it jn exile. Neither did he feel nerve center were destroved Nazi ipa such a move would cause a aga um all oa the continent yreay in diplomatic relations with wou € paralyzeaq. | Vichy French. | Damonte Taborda has agreed to] Mees hinted that the United | return the radio but is keeping the (grates is willing to forego a com- | oe Jele economic embargo. against = 2 > jJapan. { whether Argentine law has been as assured Japanese Am< | violated. This development merely y, aqdor Kichisaburo Nomura is a has made the Nazis ridiculous and ys minute conference late yesterday it is reported that vou Thermann |4),,¢ “under present conditions the] may be forced to return to Berlin. Treasury Department will grant| prompt clearance for Japanese] vessels clearing from United States ports.” MacArthur Given 0. K. His assurances were expected to bring into port the 40 Japanese ;ships which have been hovering off | {the Pacific Coast fearing they'd be! |detained should they enter Ameri-| can waters. The ships include the; big passenger liner, Tatuta Maru,| carrying a perishable cargo of] $3,000,000 of raw silk and more than 100 American passengers. Meanwhile, the Senate confirme Presidert Roosevelt's homination of Douglas MacArthur, former chief of staff, as a lieutenant general to

Senator said that a decision on action was due, at least in part, to Smashed, Great Britain will regard !

the prospect that she might not be!it 8s her “bounden duty to insure

De Gaulle and his Free French able to continue to obtain oil sup-|that Germany is not again, in |boys out of the trenches by Christ‘plies from the Netherlands Indies. another 20 years, in a position tomas” failed, blamed “about 100”

Shutting off of shipments from Plunge the world into the misery the Dutch East Indies would deprive 2nd horror of total war,” Foreign the Japanese of approximately 760.- Secretary Anthony Eden stated 000 tons of crude oil and 546,000 tons | 0day at a luncheon of the Foreign of other oil products per year. How- Press Association. ever, the possibility was open that| But while military the Dutch Government would allow Must be iaken” he added, “it is shipments to continue under license. 10t part of our purpose to cause Germany or any other country to Obtain Eight Bases ‘collapse economically. I say that Japanese forces rapidly were tak- not out of love for Germany but ing over French Indo-China today. because a starving and bankrupt Naval forces and 7000 troops were (Germany in the midst of Europe reported to have been landed by the Would poison all of us who are her Japanese today at Cam Ranh Bay, neighbors. That is not sentiment; the great uncompleted naval base, |it iS common sense.” with a total of 40,000 said to be | The Foreign Secretary did not moving into the colony. Saigon |further develop this indication reported that the Japanese ob- that crushing reparations such as tained eight principal bases under |W€r'¢ imposed on Germany at Vertheir occupation agreement, which S2illes would not again be dewas formhlly signed at Vichy today. manded of her. The Japanese people will learn Sees ‘Great Task’ of the tion for the first tim i ot ihe vee pe B % Pondering the shape of things to In Shanghai, Japanese military COME, Eden forecast a war-torn, authorities prevented the loading of a Philippine ship with Japanese goods destined for the United States and the Japanese Army paper said that Japan must “protect” Bast Asia and the Dutch East Indies, if necessary, by force. The British were preparing for)

the United States to play its part both in the reconstruction and in the preservation of peace in “our continent.”

“Europe, after the war, will be in

terials necessary for reconstruction,

1 ! torn by hatreds, ec 8 possible issuance of a blacklist of souptul of the road rs Be And

firms continuing to trade with|ca; Ew Japan, similar to the lists already | tae to Ten ee ve 3 Sra issued of firms dealing with CoN helieve the United States of Amercerns linked with Germany an (ica will help us—is indeed helping Italy. |us—to defeat Germany, so we hope that it will work with us in keeping {through the generations the peace that we shall have won. We have

measures |

postwar Europe and appealed to]

campaign.”

In Bolivia today, another Ger-

man official, the consul at Cocha-|

bamba, had been detained and the newspaper which publishes the news of the German agency Transocean ordered to cease publication.

MEDICAL BULLETIN WINS RECOGNITION

The Indiana University Medical Bulletin, quarterly publication started more than {wo years ago. has keen given the classification as a

scientific journal of general circula- |

tion. Dr. J. K. Berman, editor of the magazine, received notice from the

command United States forces in the Far East. The administration prepared for congressional consideration a $53,{000,000 defense program for | Philippines. Meantime, $10,000,000 was allocated from the President's | emergency funds to bolster defenses | there.

‘BELIEVE MISSING GIRL | ON WAY TO DENVER

Indianapolis detectives today said they have been informed that Miss | Eleanor von Mechow, 27-year-old | Indianapolis woman missing more jthan a week may be in Denver, | Colo., or on her.way there. | Lieut. Harry Schley said Mr. and i Mrs. Logan Welch, 528 Bell St. relfatives of the Indiana University | Medical Center employee, returned

the |

Suffered bitter disillusionment be{tween the two wars. We had beMAY GUARD PANAMA lieved, perhaps too easily, that a peace system that would recomCAMP DAVIS, N. C, July 29 (U. | mend itself to the good sense of all | P.).—Maj. Gen. J. A. Green, chief peoples wbuld be planned and de- | of Coast Artillery, says that indus- bated in the council room without 'try is being geared to produce bar- other effort and without harder rage balloons in large quantities to sacrifice on our part, protect metropolitan industrial We Must Not Forget

ie

GH

iA

contact with the governors and commissioners, giving them directions on the policy to be followed in the newly acquired territory.

After a light lunch about noon, he works steadily through the afternoon without relaxation. During the afternoon hours, Mussolini generally receives ministers, high army officers and visiting foreign statesmen. Often matters of foreign policy keep him at his desk far into the night. Before the blackout, lights could be seen in his office in the box-like Venice Palace at late hours. He presides personally over all important meetings such as cabinet sessions and meetings of various Fascist bodies. While other European statesmen. who carry far less an individual load of responsibilities, generally take vacations during the summer and the Christmas holidays, Mussolini spends every possible working hour in his office. Occasionally, he may take an afternoon off for swimming or skiing, two of his favorite sports, and has a deep coat of tan throughout the year. Physicians attribute his energy and vitality to the well-ordered life he leads and his strict diet. The characteristically rich Italian cooking is completely eliminated

|

1

{his own automobile. His first visitor

He often fences, believing that every morning is Police Chief Car- tenants.

{mine Senise, who reports in detail on the internal situation. Then he receives visiting Fascist

sometimes driving |prefects, presidents of confedera- kept busy. maintaining constant|daily grind.

from his diet, which consist almost gh Fascist lieu- entirely of fish, vegetables, cheese (and fresh fruit. With the increase in the number| Friends of II Duce say he still is of Italian provinces as a result of lable to wear down most of his the Balkan campaign, Mussolini is|{younger collaborators in the hard

tions and other hi

BANKRUPT REICH Ford. 78, Assails Warfare;

| V, ® I isions ' Wo DETROIT, July 20 (U. P.).— Henry Ford today reiterated his hatred for war but foresaw a ‘“federation of the whole world” as the | result of the present world conflict. Mr. Ford expressed his oft-re-peated feeling toward war in a formal statement on the eve of his 78th birthday.

“I have always hated war,” he “I've never hated it more

| said.

| Mr. Ford, whose peace ship to end | the First World War and ‘get the

| profit-seeking munitions makers for {current world conditions but ex- | pressed belief that an unprecedented

| | | 1

RUSSIA AWAITS THIRD ASSAULT

Counter - Attacks Disturb Nazi Reorganization, Moscow Says.

|

rld Federation’

.

|

“The world is learning tolerance as never before. It is beginning to see that there is a- need on earth for every race. “There'll be more tolerance in the world because there'll be more understanding. . . . A federation of the whole world.”

PAGE 8

STILL TIME T0 GIVE ALUMINUM

Campaign to Close Tonight But Donations Can Keep Coming.

Although the state-wide alumie num-for-defense campaign formale ly closes tonight, the public wil} have an opportunity to donate scrap aluminum until Monday, Clarence Jackson, State Defense Director announced today. The collection of the donated scrap metal and its transportation to collection centers which begins tomorrow will not be completed until early next week, because of limited transportation facilities. In the meantime, you can still take an old pot or pan to collection officials and it will be welcome, “We'll still take any aluminum anyone has to offer,” Mr. Jackson said. Although the transportation of the collected metal throughout the state is being organized by the State Defense Council, Mr. Jacke son said the Council was “not rushe ing” officials of counties and towns to transport the aluminum to cone centration points.

Expect to Reach Goal

Meanwhile, Indianapolis alume inum collection officials estimated that {he State capital's contribu= tion thus far is estimated at around 60,000 pounds of used aluminum. Keith Gregg, Indianapolis Collece tion Committee campaign organizer, said he believed that the local cam= paign would come close to reache ing the goal of 100,000 pounds by early next week. Truck companies which have donated trucking facilities, will begin tomorrow to pick up the piles at the some 1000 filling stations which were used as primary collection points during the week-long came paign. The metal will he taken to fire stations, and in turn transported

Mr. Ford also predicted the postwar era will be one of prosperity based on inventive genius. He said industry will turn in its search for

MOSCOW, July 29 (U.P.).—Russian forces are inflicting heavy losses on the Germans in a new series of

to the central pile at the Indiana | World War Memorial Plaza, the col{lection point for Indianapolis and lother towns in Marion County,

materials from the forest and mine to the farm. Thousands of articles now made from metals, he said, will be made plastically from materials grown on the farm. There would be no depression after the war “if competition re-

| world tolerance will result from the | present wars. “People,” he said, “are beginning to see that you can't build anything permanent on hate.

(farm July 30, 1863, and said the

mains active,” he said. Mr. Ford was born on a Michigan

highlight of his career was “meeting and marrying Mrs. Ford.”

NEAR ODESSA, ~ NAZIS DECLARE

Communique Claims Only Two Pockets of Russians Remain Encircled. BERLIN, July 29 (U. P.).—The German High Command claimed today that the great pockets of Soviet troops in the Smolensk area

{have almost been cleared out and | the German-Rumanian forces have

{port of Odessa. The High Command said that two more big pockets of encircled Russian forces now face destruction— one final pocket to the east of Smolensk on the highway toward Moscow and the other in the Lake Peipus area where the Germans are pushing toward Leningrad. The High Command promised shortly to issue a tabulation on the great numbers of prisoners and war booty captured in the huge ‘“‘Smolensk annihilation battle.” 28 Miles from Odessa

The advance in Bessarabia was said by Nazi sources to have placed German-Rumanian troops in possession of AKkkerman, 28 miles southwest of Odessa. Akkerman is on the Dniester Estuary and its

areas, canal locks and other ob-| jectives from dive bombers. “We have learned that it is not

| In an address yesterday opening so and we must not even forget (the Army's first barrage balloon|that lesson. The sacrifices of | school, Gen. Green said that only peacetime necessary to guard jone battalion would be formed at against the ever-recurring danger | the temporary center here. Upon |of war are hard but they may be {completion of a permanent center | hardening and salutary.” near Paris, Tenn. he said, the en-| Eden once again set forth Brittire personnel of 170 officers and |ain’s determination never to sign a 2220 enlisted men would be moved |pedce with Hitler and warned his from Camp Davis to the new hase hearers, as so many British statesand be used as nuclei in forming men have done in the recent past,

American Medical Association that | vesterdav from Charlotte. N. © original articles meriting attention | fom where Miss von Mechow disof the profession at large will appeared. listed in Index Medicus, official as-| "They told the detective that thev sociation magazine. | brought back clothing and costume Dr. rman said the local publica- | jewelry left there by Miss von tion now will have access to original Mechow, daughter of a former Gerpapers written by noted lecturers at man Baron. the medical center who previously! They said that a friend of Miss have declined to release their papers 'Mechow there had received a postto any but scientific journals of gen- card saying that she was on the

other units. the press regarding the London bal- | loon barrage that we hardly think of balloons being of use excepting | for the defense of a large city,” he said. “Should we become involved! in this war, barrage balloons would | be ideal for added protection of the locks of the Panama Canal. the Welland Canal, and the Sault Ste. |

eral circulation. {way to Denver.

Marie locks.”

|that the world must expect a Ger-| “So much has been published in |

man peace offer which he predicted would be “a monument of moderation and sweet reasonableness and hypocrisy.”

OFFICIAL WEATHER

U. S. Weather Burean INDIANAPOLIS FORECAST — Continued

capture would mean the Russians [had been driven completely out of | Bessarabia, which was taken from | Rumania last year. | Military spokesmen emphasized | the difficulties of weather and ter{rain which are being encountered lon the Eastern Front and the tena{cious resistance of Russian troops. { Military experts in special news- | paper articles continued to develop {the idea that conditions in the | Russo-German war were “unique,” {and that the High Command was | revealing as little as possible in {order to keep all information from | the Russians. | Maj. Otto Lehmann, writing in | today’s Lokalanzeiger. admitted that | the “vast spaces” of Russia and the | fierce resistance of Russian troops “even when encircled” had cost the i Germans time. Spokesmen said they knew noth-

|

|

| Add New Twist

|

|

1 swept across Bessarabia to within | (a state of exhaustion, short of ma- | 28 miles of the big Soviet Black Sea |

| |

/ . o'V' Campaign VICHY, July 29 (U. P.).—A new twist in the V propaganda tussle {between Britain and Germany was oted today. { The British radio advised its par|tisans in France to add the Lor{raine Cross—symbol of the movement of Gen. Charles DeGaulle—to their V's to distinguish them from the German-sponsoredq V's. The new V's with the Lorraine cross appeared on Vichy buildings housing various government offices, including the Ministry of Propaanda.

QUIZ SUSPECTS IN PAROLEE'S DEATH

BEDFORD, Ind., July 29 (U. P). —Police today questioned witnesses in an attempt to identify the assailant who inflicted fatal hatchet wounds on Jehn Hancock, 42, Mitchell. Hancock died yesterday in a Bedford hospital. He was found in a home near here Sunday morning. Sheriff John Peyton said Hancock apparently was attacked while he slept. He said, however, that the victims's wife, Stella, and another woman staying in the home reported no disturbance. Hancock was a parolee from sa state prison sentence imposed in April, 1937. for the fatal shooting of Henry Tow near Bryantsville.

GERMANS REPORTED PLUNDERING NORWAY

LONDON, July 29 (U. P.).—Meat, bacon and eggs are almost unobtainable in Norway and even milk and potatoes are now getting scarce hecause the Germans are taking all the food they can find, a Norwegian Government statement said today. It was sald that the bread ration was now half a pound a day, that the butter ration was 1's ounces a day, that the sugar ration was seven ounces a week and that sufficient coffee was allowed for two cups a week, “German plundering of Norwegian food stocks ig likely to in-

n

determined counter-attacks at selected points of the front as the Yast Canvass: Tonight Germans seek to reorganize for a| Indianapolis also will receive all third offensive, a war communique of the aluminum collected from 11 said today. [other counties in central part of It was asserted that in the the state. Indianapolis is one of Smolensk area of the Moscow front | nine cities designated by Mr. Jack= and the Zhitomir area of the Kiev | son as concentration points. front the German forces, still at-| The scrap brought to Indianap= tacking in a vain attempt to find | olis from the surroundin®§ counties a weak spot, were being broken by |will be dumped into a pile near the tenacious and stubborn Russian re- |State Police Radio headquarters a sistance. |the State Fair Grounds. Their blitzkrieg armies bogged, the| The last house-to-house canvass Germans resumed their attempt at in Indianapolis will be carried out mass raids of Moscow during the tonight in the 20th and 21st Wards, night. |A gang of several hundred Boy and A special communique said that Girl Scouts has been recruited for between 140 and 150 German planes | tonight's canvass on the Northeast tried to break through the outer |Side. defense ring, but only four or five | of them got through to bomb the | Moscow area indiscriminately, cen- | tering on residential districts. The! casualty toll was reported small.

Sickness Costly Russian night fighter planes and | To U. S. Defense anti-aircraft guns shot down nine

of the raiding planes, the com-|BY Science Service munique- said. | PITTSBURGH .—Approximately The days’ communiques, like com-| 500,000 workers will be AWOL muniques of the last few days, indi-| this year from the industrial cated strongly that the Russians, army behind the lines because of were not only holding their lines! absenteeism, the trustees of the along the eastern front but were| newly christened Industrial Hytaking the initiative to an increas-| giene Foundation, formerly the ingly greater extent. Air Hygiene Foundation, here The communiques said Russian Dpredict. planes, co-operating with land] This means about one billion forces, raided big German troop| man-hours lost in heavy indus concentrations yesterday and at-| tries alone. The average worker tacked grounded planes on German | loses eight days a year because airdromes. Revised reports showed| of illness. For every day that that 109 German planes were shot| figure can be reduced there will down Saturday. be a gain of 120,000,000 man-

. hours a year or the services of 2 HELD ON GIRL'S CHARGE | 60,000 men {ull time. MAMARONECK, N. Y, July 20, The Foundation, which has (U. P).—Two tennis players were| changed its name to describe held today on charges of assaulting |

more briefly its expanding activi-

Claire Beringer, 17, a beautiful! blond model, at the point of a gun. | They are Jack March, 21, of Pel-| ham, and Robert Decker, 22, a student at Miami University, Miami, Fla. Both pleaded not guilty in police court and their hearing was adjourned until tomorrow.

|

Strauss Says:

ties for protecting the health of workers, has sent a special bule letin to its member companies calling on the affiliated industrial concerns to take every possible precaution to combat the health hazards that increase with ine creased production.

| warm and humid this afternoon, tonight and temorrow, becoming cooler tomorrow night and Thursday: temperature this afternoon about 97 and humidity about 45; { partly clondy weather with some likelihood

|ing of reports ahroad quoting Ger{man sources in Finland, that Ger{man and Finnish artillery was bombarding Leningral “from three di-

{ crease owing to the loss of Russian | supplies,” the statement said. | ee bb

Do you need a STRAW HAT— to replace one that may have become

IN INDIANAPOLIS

Co-operative Club of Indianapolis, Co-

Here Is the Traffic Record ,giieit™ oon County City Total

if 3 8 18

Antlers, noon. XM. C A 7:30 Youn A.8p m | Sigma Alpha Epsilon, Board of Trade, | oon |

noon. Union Printers’ International Baseball @ Association, Hotel Lincoln, all dav.

i

Arrests

MON AFFIC COURT AY TRI CUE | hil MARRIAGE LICENSES Cases COIviC- FINES! thes tists are from oMicisl records in Violations tried tions paid | (ne County Court House. The Tim i ore, is not responsible for errors in | mames and addresses.

Failure to stop at through street.. DisSbesing traffic

| Robert Stringer, 38, of 2508 Sheldon: ty Flora Fairchild, 30, of 1157 Merlowe.

| kee Baris y 22, iid 1083 2 Meprill: | Margaret M. ropshire, 18, o : 13 | Davidson.

ey MeCor, 35, of 308 N. East; Mary , 18, of 309 N. Eas New York:

418 W. 416 W. New York. am achers, 21, Folcroft, Pa; Margaret A. Wild, 20, of 13

40 Park. BIRTHS

Girls

lard Hawk, at Methodist. Groober. at Methodist.

3

i

signa + 3 5 Drunken driving. 3 2 33 28 2 $37

1 Hotel, noon.

Club, Cia a -Arms Hotel, noon.

| oon. | Lincoln, |

Marianna: vieve, nia,

Wi James

Universal Maurice

Lutheran Service Club, Hotel a Mullinex, noon. S. i r . arjorie. Lloyd Mattson. at St. Francis. Phalany Fraternity, Y. M. C. A, 7:30 Callie. Karl Brewton at City. . Alpha Tan a. Albert DeCoursey, at St. VinUn Pri nts

nv's Helen, Robert Dick. at St. Vinge i Rosemary. Edward Bovie, at St ent’s

Kyie DeLung. at St. Kenneth Hussey,

at

Board of Trade, noon

Omega. : nters’ International Baseball] C® all dav | Hotel

Exchange Club Beard, le onl. i MAianapelis Power & Light Co., Hotel; erin, 6:38 p. m. Ceniral Indiana . Hien, Claynooi Hous. noon. f University of Michigan COlab, Board ef! Trede, noon.

MEETINGS TOMORROW Alumni Association, Hotel

n-

Severin,

Betty. Lucille, ; | cent’s. : i ; Frait Growers Assoeia-| Atyrile. William Ravi. at St. Vincent's. 1 o Roxie. Bennie Carroll. at 943 Lynn. Boys Clara. Willard Patten. at Methodist. beth. Lewis Meier, at st. : , Howar ody. Ne ist. i il Sh , at thodist. h 1 hristensen, at 8t.

Vincent's Ss

at St. Vin-

Indiana Motor Truck Association, Hotel] Camera Club, Y. M. C. A m, cilh ! g Men's Discussion Club, Y. M. © | 19th.

Underwood, st |

Vin- |

. at 638 N. Blake Davis, at 1503'; E

Vada. Sam Wells. 609 E Louisiana. Hazel. Vivian Chapman. at 513 S. Dre Marv. James Bundrem. at 307 E. Wa ingotn. a. Ira Woods, at 2318 Winthroo, Marie, Carl Brown. at 1032 E. Trov, Cecelia. Arthur Kramer. at 4350 E. 21st

Elizabeth, at Vincent's

Albert Francis, Dennis cent's

arv. John Livnem

Thomas

| Barrett, at St

rearet,

Kel. sh-

DEATHS

Ida Ellen Grimes, 72, at 1429 Carrollton, chronic myocarditis. Thomas C. Conrad, 58, at City, pneu-

at 3080 N. Meridian, carcinoma

Moses A. Isaacs, 73, at 4339 N. Illinois, coronary occlusion. reely Cox, at City, arteriosclerosis. Robert N. Hines, 74, at Central Indiana, cerebral hemorrhage. omas Vandever, 33 at 1868 S. Keystone, chronic myocarditis. James F. Lindley, 78, at 2137 N. Delaware, septicaemia, a usman, 87. at Hotel English. Eve Nell Reno, 57, at Methodist, carcioma.

William ©. Jennings, 78, at Methodist, carcin . ug eranda, 46, at Long, tumer of Thomas Flint, 3 weeks, at Methodist, ’ Orant 1 Bri 57 C; rl Briner, 57, Frank Vanoff, 43, at Ni mococeic meningitis. i Ra Tucker. 25. at City, uremia. Anna Hengstler. 61, at 639 Warren, corey occlusion, é ARG pent , 87, at "1008 College, oronary thrombosis. ; eR ew McHugh, 78, at 845 N. Eastern, diabetes mellitus Earl E minons, 81, at 845 N. Keycarcinoma. Elizabeth Burbridge, 88 at 2938 Shriver,

TArcoma. Mary Eskew Williams, 88, at 32 Wood-

tT n 7 ions, Sha Clagmool motel, moon, . Charles Prater, at St. Vincent's.

ia . Hacer Adams, mo., at Riley, menin&itis, + ‘

t Long. hernia. | Denver ethodist, pneu- | Dodge City. Ka

stone, carcinoma. Leona C. Bherfiek, 47, at Methodist, Q

of afternoon thundershowers. :

{Central Standard Time) Sunrise 1:10 | Sunset

TEMPERATURE —July 20, 1940— Sires SLIP. M ....... 0%

BAROMETER TODAY 6:30 a. m. ... 2995

Precipitation 24 hours ending 7 a. m. 1 precipitation since Jan, 1 ficiency sinee Jan. 1

be * MIDWEST WEATHER

Indiana—Continued warm and humid tonight and tomerrow, becoming cooler tomorrow night: partly cloudy with scattered th owers. Lower n—Continued warm and humid; with scattered thundershowers tonight an T! oming cooler tomorrow n

1 ig in north and extreme west, porti Orrow. Ohi—Generally fair and continued warm,

exceot for lo:al thundershowers in extreme Roth portion tonight: tomorrow local thunderstorms and not quite so warm. WEATHER IN OTHER CITIES 6:30 A. M. Weather Bar. Temp.

110, Ke covatiiy PtCld tek, N b. Rain 3 3 Picidy 29.81

Amari Bisma to!

Okie, Ctx, Okia, ©. » Y. A. gee aha, Neb. 2.

85 12 82 80 28 65 72 80 82 75 83 8 76 82 3 78 5 52 i ®

rections.” However. German radio announcers said Finnish troops were fighting forward victoriously on both| sides of Lake Ladoga. They said] that the Finns had shot down 101 Russian planes Sunday night. Radio commentators said that during the week-end German troops destroyed 93 Russian tanks “near

| |

8 Kiev,” on the Ukrainian front,

TROUTMAN IN HOSPITAL

|

Capt. Leo Troutman, head of the Police Accident Prevention Bureau, today was in St. Vincent's Hospital with an infected left arm resulting from a tiny scratch on a finger, Just recovering from a serious operation, Capt. Troutman was taken to the hospital Sunday night. His condition was reported not critical.

If, by any chance, you are worrying about how the extreme heat affects bees, stop it right away. They're sitting pretty. James Starkey, State bee inspector, took time out yesterday to report that bees have perfected an air-conditioning system by which they keep their hives very comfortable, even when human beings are sweltering. When the temperature goes inte the 90's, all the bees in hive stop whatever they're doing, and form into two large divisions. Mostly they are the younger worker bees assigned to household duty, but it is believed that occasionally part of the field force joins in. Having formed two divisions they take places on o ite sides of the

Bees Happy on Hot Days With Own Cooling System

deployed at the rear of the hive. In preparation for this air-condi tioning project, they have filled cells with water, which is an important part of the plan. The bees in one division turn their heads toward the rear of the hive. Then at a given signal from the boss bee, they buzz their wings. The net result is that air is fanned in from outside into the hive by the buzzing of one division. This air goes over the water in the cells and evaporates, cooling the hive off. This keeps up until the temperature outside goes down out of the 90's, and then the bees break up and go about their ordinary duties. When, on a hot summer day, you hear a droning busz in a bee hive,

hive entrance, with some of them

-

that'll be the bees beating the heat,

»

sunburnd or

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