Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 13 August 1941 — Page 3

5

WEDNESDAY, AUG. 13, 1041 Sols

JAPANESE CAL --BEFORE STORM

Nations Which Under-Estimate Nipponese Strength ‘Invite Unfortunate Results,” Official Says; Newspapers Warn Thailand to Shun U. S.

TOKYO. Aug. 13 (U. P.).—Japan is in “the calm before a storm” and hostile nations that under-estimate Japanese strength are “inviting unfortunate results,” a naval spokesman warned today as restrictions on exports from IndoChina tightened the diplomatic crisis in the Pacific.

Japanese newspapers] Yt tv “ t ra 3 + was a limit to their patience an warned Thailand not to acCePL (pat after that limit was reached Anglo-American guarantees there would be an explosion.

on the grounds that nations Ihe Japanese people, he said,

which had done so “now are sure. dead.” | Hiraide’s statement followed offi{cial expressions of concern over They said Japan would not tol-' plans for shipment of Amererate any Thailand submission t0 jean war supplies to Russia by Britain. The newspaper Nichi Nichi way said it was for that reason Thailand ed with an official Domei News had declared her neutrality. Agency dispatch from Hanoi saying “Now is not the time to fuss over that all exports from Indo-China

would not be discouraged by pres-;

of Vladivostok and coincid-|

3

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

PAGE 8

‘Made in Germany’ Picture of U.S. Disunity Gives France to Hitler

By JOHN T. WHITAKER

NEW YORK, Aug. 13.—Gambling on America’s unwillingness to go to war, Marshal Henri Petain has made France the “undeclared” ally

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

| of Nazi Germany today.

When Hitler needs them, Morocco and

| Dakar will serve as German bases and the swastika will fly over the

French fleet.

E

{ {

whether Japan should enter the had been banned except for ex-

war.” the spokesman, Hideo Hiraide, ports to Japan. The ban was not told the Japanese press. explained. “The present is merely the calm| (The Japanese radio, heard by before the storm and the people CBS, asserted that the United must be prepared.” | States had offered military aid to Hiraide said that the Japanese Thailand but that it had been were peace-loving but that there “flatly refused.”

Barefoot Men Rout Tanks

MOSCOW, Aug. 13 i troops was reported today to have routed a German motorized division and a Soviet communique claimed that two more divisions, including one of Hitler's picked “SS” troops, had been smashed. The communique also reported that Russian planes had destroyed

the Czernovoda bridge, spanning the Danube, and the main oil pipeline |

to the Rumanian Black Sea coast,

virtually isolating it from rail con- of the Ukraine, and isolating Odessa, |b

nections with the rest of the coun- pjack Sea grain port. try. | The barefoot detachment had pention of heavy fighting anybeen encircled for 32 days and was battling its way back to the RUS- Ga, planes had struck at German sian lines when it encountered the! Comal ie SININON Rue. 2iTcraft and added that three Nazi e dispatches sai a e Rus- | down durin sians, called by the Nazis “the wild plane hE ® Bolshevik division,” killed 3000 Ger-| Peter Popkov > mans, seized 300 munitions trucks :

(U.P.).—A detachment of barefoot Russian [

president of the

This is the blunt meaning of the new move in France. The care. ful phrases of the aged marshal cannot hide the fact that the armed forces of France now have been placed directly under the command of Admiral Darlan who stands or falls by that German vic-

tory in which he so passionately believes. Japan will move for Hitler next and in that moment—the moment when the fighting in Russia becomes critical—Spain certainly and Portugal possibly will join with the French and the Japanese

Will Britain Strike North or South?

AT

NORWAY

72 wh

» ay FRANCE

The latest communique made no where, reported merely that Rus- |

|panzer units, infantry and grounded |

ALGERIA

vd oosoen GERMANY

ag.

ENA STINE 1

Sw

> < h | and hundreds of motorcycles. They Leningrad Soviet, reported to the

arrived back at Russian lines bare- | official Government ear Iz- | foot and most of them in tattered Vesti ‘that in six weeks o rman | German uniforms |air raids not one bomb had been | The third German offensive, with dropped on Leningrad and said the |

a* Tobruk

Nazi armored forces pounding to- ‘approaches to the city were strewn | ward Leningrad and into the|Vith Wrecked Nazi planes.

RECAPTURE

OF LIBYA? Ox LIBYA

500 kv Tripoli,

No . VU mt.

Ukraine at opposite ends of the] Division Smashed

—Britain will stand alone against is the lone neutral. French policy is based on a

a world in which the United States

picture of America “made in Ger-

many.” Petain as well as Darlan have been queted to this corre-

spondent as feeling certain that

America is disunited, its national

will - paralyzed and its Administration forced to rely upon aid-to-Britain, rather than offensive action. So long as America is unwilling to send ships and men abroad to root out the Nazis wherever a front can be found. Hitler can persuade the statesmen of Vichy, Tokyo and Madrid that his own German vic-

tory is inevitable,

An American declaration of war is the only thing in the opinion

of virtually all foreign observers

which would immediately prevent

France, Spain and Japan from coming in on the German side—not in

open war against America but in

concerted efforts to destroy Britain.

The German plan calls for a period of peace before the “world alliance” is ready to attack America. After one month in Great Britain your correspondent believes that

Be German Attacks |

\ Russo-German S, Battlefront

"4 Bombed by RAF

® Oil Fields rehangel

AID TO RUSSIA

.

SOVIET RUSSIA

AID TO C RUSSIA?

LENGTHEN HOURS IN DEFENSE JOBS

8-Hour Day Suspended to Speed Building; Probe Sabotage Charge.

By UNITED PRESS

President Roosevelt today issued an executive order designed to speed | military construction through sus{pension of the eight-hour day for mechanics and laborers employed by the War Department on air | fields, troop housing units, fortifications and other public works projects.

T. Early said the order was issued because of necessity for finishing all military projects at the earliest possible date. Similar orders had been issued previously for outlying defense areas. Meanwhile, Federal Bureau of Investigation agents considered evi-

J (dences of sabotage at a strike-bound

plant with contracts for Army test

4 bombs and bomb castings.

Local officers at Manwah, N. J.

4 revealed sand had been poured into

J | powerhouse machinery, fixtures

(J (broken and parts removed from

Troops

1800-mile front, appeared to Rave; The “SS” division, supported by lulled temporarilv. The Soviet High two regiments of the German VikCommand reported that nothing of ing infantry division, was driven importance had occurred. back in disorder and the 68th Diviy : sion, which came to the rescue, was No Tange in 3 ats wiped out, it was said. There have been no official in-; (A United Press Berlin dispatch dications of a shift in the battle, reporved today oe Yeats ja Bln lines since Monday night when | Of Lien Sen. AFUE Xueivers .

| “SS” division commander, and one | heavy fighting was reported at of the pioneer Nazi leaders.) | Kakisalmi on the Karelian isthmus. | Soltsi south of Leningrad, Smo- cated that the battle was one of |

i : i | lensk on the road to Moscow, arg | fe most ao Th ey; at Korosten and Uman

: in the counter-attacked in close formation Ukraine. lin hope of retrieving their position The third offensive appeared t0 in the final phase, dispatches said, be aimed at closing a pincers only to be cut down by Russian around Leningrad and Kiev, capital | fire.

By WILLIAM H. STONEMAN

Black Sea Chase Described —zrsiux=

| LONDON, Aug. position in the Ukraine is regarded authoritatively as extremely serious

BERLIN. Aug. 13 (U. P)—German, Hungarian and Rumanian rapid troops and infantry divisions are pursuing Russian forces toward |

harbors on the Black Sea coast, inflicting heavy losses on their rear and capable of becoming very much more serious. It was implied that massed German infantry were catching up with | German claims to have reached

guards, a High Command communique said today.

the Russians as they sought to reach embarkation points entrapment. The German forces, , it was asserted, had thrust a wedge to the Black Sea coast probably east ion “residential outskirts” of Berlin, not of Odessa.

and avoid the not

REDS" POSITION sen =ERT CALLED SERIOUS

Fate in Ukraine Depends on

sive bombs. Bombs were dropped position of the opposing forces is

in the Mediterranean in an attempt to divert Hitler into another two-front war.

|

Past Catches Up With Fugitive

NORTH MANCHESTER, Ind. Aug. 13 (U. P.).—Twenty-two vears ago, Leslie Burgermeister, now 62, escaped from the Ohio State Penitentiary where he had been serving a term for forgery. Yesterday, North Manchester police arrested him on suspicion and checked his story that he was a representative of a Terre Haute welfare organization. Authorities i 5 s| at Terre Haute said he was not. ere Pdlice here formally charged 13. — Russia's] Burgermeister with misrepresenta- | x tion and took his fingerprints. It was then that he admitted the | Ohio escape. Officials are awaiting word from Ohio.

Ability to Muster ~ Fresh Men.

d Th ica

Black Sea at two points are disputed, although the exact

OFFICIAL WEATHER

U. S. Weather Bureau

known. If the position is what

INDIANAPOLIS FORECAST—Fair tonight

SEEK WOMEN AS FERRY PILOTS

2733 Questioned by Army On Possibility of Relieving Men.

—The War Department is considering plans to utilize women fliers

{in the Army flight Ferry Command

which is speeding deliveries of American-built warplanes from factories to the British in less than half the time previously required by commercial channels. A questionnaire as to their avail-

{ability for possible “auxiliary” serv-

ice, either of a military or civilian character, has been dispatched to

| heavy equipment at the American Brake Shoe and Foundry Co., where | 400 AFL moulders and foundry | workers walked out July 28, seeking | wage increases. Union spokesmen {denied their members were involved {in the sabotage. Defense Strikes Gain Other developments in defense | labor disputes were: | 1. War Department officials said ‘they were seriously concerned over ‘an increase in defense industry |strikes, releasing an official survey {showing that the number of defense |strikes increased from a mid-week {figure of 24 walkouts involving 14,000

yesterday of 30 strikes involving 23,150 workers. Three disruptions in |production, regarded as among the | most serious in the defense proJsram, were at the Curtiss-Wright [propeller plant, Caldwell, N. J.; the Mack Truck Co.'s Allentown, Pa., ‘plant, and the Ampco Twist Drill |Co. plant at Jackson, Mich. 2. At Washington, Secretary of Navy Frank Knox resumed conferlences with L. M. Korndorff, president of the Federal Shipbuilding & | Drydock Co., Kearny, N. J., where a $493,000,000 ship construction program is halted by a strike of C. I. O. Marine and Shipbuilding Union

White House Secretary Stephen |

Hitler has underestimated Britain's

powers of resistance and that he is

leading the statesmen of Vichy, Madrid and Tokyo into the same perilous blunder which Mussolini committed when the Italian, seeing the imminent collapse of France, gambled on the ultimate capitulation

of Britain.

Hitler is desperate, however, and he little cares what happens to the French, the Spaniards and the Japanese. He is winning them to his side on the single argument—America’s unwillingness to go to war. ? I talked in Portugal last week with Frenchmen and Spaniards, They said sneeringly that no one feared America so long as this country could debate in such a moment the question of extending the draft

pericd.

The isolationist leaders have won a great victory for France. They

have won Morocco, Dakar and the French fleet.

individual German generals like

That is more than Keitel have won. They are now

winning Spain and Japan for Hitler, however honest and well-mean= ing they may be. Lindbergh and Wheeler deserve the oak leaves of the’

Knights of The Iron Cross.

Only I in 12

4

William H. Larrabee

LARRABEE SAYS ‘AYE’ ON DRAFT

Hitler Into Militarism, He Declares.

By DANIEL M. KIDNEY Times Staff Writer WASHINGTON, Aug. 13.—Rep. William H. Larrabee (D. Ind) emerged today as the only Indiana man in Congress who voted for $47,1000,000,000 worth of armaments and then voted for men to man them. { All the others votea for the arms ibut not the men. The mild-man-|nered couniry doctor from New {Palestine stood alone among the {Hoosiers again last night in supporting the draft extension bill. It

Great Britain, primed for an offensive move while Germany is busy in Russia, may strike in the Arctic or workers last week to a high mark | will keep the selectees in the service |

another 18 months if passed by the Senate. Reps. Louis Ludlow, John W. Boehne Jr. and William T. Schulte, Democrats. joined with the eight Indiana Republicans in opposing the measure. Harness Voted Down

. Both Senators Frederick VanNuys (D. Ind) and Raymond Willis (R. Ind.) voted against the bill last week when it passed the Senate. Rep. Forest A. Harness (R. Ind), minority member of the House Military Affairs Committee, moved to

| far-going | France and Germany involving dras-

Is Forcing U. 3.

"VICHY IN CHARGE

OF ERRAND BOYS’ London Says Neither Petain Nor Weygand Worth Treating Kindly. By WILLIAM H. STONEMAN Copyright 1841, bv Che Indianapolis Times and The Chicago Daily News, Inc. LONDON, Aug. 13.—Assumption of dictatrial powers by Vice Pree mier Admiral Jean Darlan is ree

garded in London as the preface to collaboration between

tic concessions to Hitler in French Africa. Tunisia 1s regarded as one of the areas in which those concessions are likely to be made, though they may also inclule the surrender of French sovereign rights on the West Coast, While Great Britain long since decided that nothing but enmity was to be expected from Marshal ° Henri Philippe Petain, Admiral Dare lan and other Vichy chiefs, British policy toward France has been cone ditioned by the insistence of Washe ington that both Petain and the North African generalissimo, Gen, Maxime Weygand, were secretly friendly and that they should cone sequently be handled with silk gloves. It is hoped here that now, at long last, it will be realized on the other

side of the Atlantic that neithee Petain nor Weygand is worth treating kindly and that only the mos rigorous measures can have any effect on France. . Gen. Weygand, it is pointed out; now becomes nothing more than an errand boy for Admiral Darlan who, in turn, is nothing but an errand boy tor Berlin.

Berlin Says Petain Talk .

Proves ‘Solidarity’ !

BERLIN, Aug. 13 (U. PJge Authorized German quarters today said they welcomad vesterday's speech by Marshal Henri Philippe Petain as ‘recognition of European solidarity and a rebuff to those who want to place France under non-European tutelage.” It was said that Petain's “clearly indicated determination to co-op-erate with Germany” emphasized recognition of “the great task which Germany has assumed to defend Europe against Bolshee vism.” .

‘recommit the bill to committee last

Authorized quarters were asked

Workers, protesting company rejec- night and was voted down, 190 to| whether the speech put Germany

| recommendation tor a limited union | shop. A defense official indicated | Mr. Korndorff’s offer to turn the plant over {io the Government was ‘unsatisfactory, and said an executive ‘order was being drafted authorizing | Government seizure. Reopen Cleveland Plant 3. Curtiss-Wright Corp, continued limited operations in its propel-

i: plant at Caldwell, N. J., and ad-

vised striking A. F. of L. machinists [it could not negotiate with them. A company official said the strike was

The communique was issued from

{It was said, and there were “a few jt seems to be, it is hard to believe Fifteen Brit- that the Russians can escape the

and tomorrow; not much change in tem. perature.

directed at the National Labor Re-

WASHINGTON, Aug. 13 (U. P)./tion of a defense mediation board 215.

Rep. Larrabee was the only Indiana member not opposing this proposition which might amount to killing the bill. Immaculately dressed in a white suit and decked out with a black tie and kerchief, Dr. Larrabee stood at the railing on the right-hand (Democratic) side of the House and supported the Administration 100 per cent, as he has done throughout the defense program.

particularly when a recapitulation was asked on the final roll call, the

Although the session was tense, |

|and France back on the collaborae< | tion basis agreed upon last year [when Adolf Hitler and Petain cone ferred at Montoire. “It is impossible to say yet what is the exact temperature of Ger-man-French relations in terms of degrees on a thermometer,” was the reply. Commenting on the Russo-Brit= ish guarantee to aid Turkey in event she is attacked authorized i German quarters said that “one hears their words but does not bee (lieve them.” Further German ree |action to the guarantee to Turkey

dead and wounded.” {11th District representative, who ex- | probably will come later, it was

pects to oppose Rep. Raymond S.|said.

Springer (R. Ind.) in the 10th Dis- tenes trict next year, voted his convictions MAYHILL QUITS AS EDITOR AT DELPHI

without rancor. “From the beginning I have beDELPHI, Ind.. Aug. 13 (U. P.) — Bert B. Mayhill, editor of the Delphi

[the nation’s 2733 licensed i Board rather than the com-

| fliers by Col. Robert Olds, chief of Dat Cleveland. is os ; ‘ eveland, mson esSight ferry command. sions Co., manufacturer of aircraft No conclusions have bee N parts, reopened today after a tworeached as to the future of such an|day strike of C. I. O. workers. The

organization, and it has not been COmpany agreed to an election Fri0 determined whether it should be | d8Y t determine whether the C. 1.

ANGE STIR atqunsiess ish planes were shot down, it was evacuation of both Odessa and NiGerman troops scored new suc- said. kolaiev and general withdrawal becesses in continued attacks in sec-| Although according to German hind the Dnieper.

tors other than the Ukraine, the! wi | : communique said. and German TePorts the British planes inflicted| If the southern armies go

“ : " ___ successfully withdrawn by pianes during the night “effective- only “inconsiderable” damage in| and or water. it should be possible ly” attacked important ’ :

railroad | yesterday's raids on the western for them, in Londons opinion, to

Sunrise .... 4:55 | Sunset..... 6:43

TEMPERATURE —Avg. 13, 1940—

BAROMETER TODAY 6:30 a. m. 30.16

Precipitation 24 hrs. endi

lieved in the absolute necessity of our defense program,” Rep. Larra-

centers west of Moscow with ex- industrial area. 1 da not Hie

plosive and incendiary bombs. The official news agency DNB said today that the Luftwaffe and anti-aircraft guns yesterday destroyed a total of 184 Russian airplanss. Attention of Berliners shifted sharply to the British Royal Air force blows against Germany and German = occupied territory and British and Russian raids on Berlin, which experienced its fifth raid In six days during the night. The latest raid—as a communique

indirectly admitted—was the most | i In British opinion,

- 10-OUNCE BABY BORN now depends on the Germans’ abil- S

active of the recent series, with the British taking over a new aerial offensive from the Russians who made the first four raids. The communique was brief. It did not mention damage but admitted casualties.. The communique said that British planes raided Western. Northern and Central Germany and dropped “a small number” of explo-

(U.P). —Kathleen Jackson. 10

these reports in- establish a strong line behind the dicated that the British employed! Dnieper for defense of the great strong forces by asserting that 42 industrial area lying east of that planes were shot down in addition river. (to the 10 claimed in the night raid. (Foreign correspondents in Ber{lin are restricted to the wording of jcommuniques in reporting air raids. {Because of the tone of the foregoing report of the la'est British ‘raids on Germany, and especially on Berlin, it might be gathered |ipiucts to the north, it does not that the raids are now being felt} ppear so certain that the armies and that the night raid on Berlin| ca; effect an orderly retreat and Was a big one) avoid being cut off.

Reds Control

Since the Russian fieet presumably controls the Black Sea along the Russian Coast it seems likely that the Odissa garrison can be transported eastward by water. Due to the slapbang nature of German

Sea

Total precipitation since Deficiency since Jan. 1

MIDWEST WEATHER Indiana—Fair and continued cool tonight; tomorrow partly cloudy, slightly warmer in north portion. Ilinois—Fair to partly cloudy tonight and tomorrow occasional showers in northwest and extreme west central portions tomorrow afternoon or night; not so cool in northwest tonight, warmer in north and central portions tomororw. Lower Michigan—Fair to partly cloudy tonight and tomorrow; not quite so coo in north and west portions tonight; warmer tomorrow.

WEATHER IN OTHER CITIES, 6:30 A. M. Station Amarillo, Tex.

evervthing

|ity to maintain pressure and the!

| LIVERPOOL. England, Aug. 13) Russians’ ability to replace losses with fresh men and equipment. IR

Reports that the Germans are preparing a landing by a fleet of barges somewhere along the Ukrainian Coast is regarded as false. Russian control of the sea would

ounces. believed the world's smallest {baby, was born here today. She Was wrapped in cotton wool and | was fed drops of brandy and glucose | from a fountain pen filler. A doll carriage was being used as a crib.

IN INDIANAPOLIS

Here Is the Traffic Record

County City Total 3998 ....ce0veiiins 42 ” 1941 |. 40 84

Accidents Arrests

TUESDAY TRAFFIC COURT

Cases Convic- Fines Violations tried tions Speeding 29 24 8193 Reckless driving. 8 6 Failure to stop at through street . Disobeying traffic signals Drunken driving

verses. 107

... 23 | Injured 10

12 11

Totals ..

MEETINGS TODAY

American Veterinary Medical Association, all day, Murat ple. Indiana Moter Truck Association, noon, Hotel Antlers. ‘ C. A. Camera Club, 7:30 p. m., A

Y.M C. A Lions Club, noon, Claypool Hotel Young Men's Discussion Club, 6 p. m Y.M C. A Purdue Alumni Association, noon, Hotel

Severin. 12th District American Legion, noon, Board of Trade. Te a Alpha Epsilon, noon, Board of ade

Division, noon, Canary Cottage. Indians Seciety, Sons of the American Revelution, noon, ink Arms. Delta Theta an, noen, Seville Restaurant. Co-Operative Club of Indianapolis, noon, Columbia Club. Junier

lumbia Clu

| Hillcrest 1

paid | 65 |

oy Rdiana olit Real Estate Board, Property Lu snagers

Chamber of Commerce, noon, Co-| Edith b. ras

40-plus Club, 7:30 p. m., Chamber of Commerce. Indiana Bankers’ Association, noon. Columbia Club. Marion County Fair, all dav. New Bethel. Kiwanis Club, noon, Coiumbia Club,

MEETINGS TOMORROW

' Indianapolis Real Estate Board, all day. untry Club. | _ Advertising Club of Indianapolis, noon, | Sianapolis Athletic Club. Oil ub, noon. Severin Hotel. Indianapolis Camera Club, 8 p. m., 110 | E._Ninth St. Beta Theta Pi, noon, Canary Cottage. U. 8S. Duparifent of Agriculture, noon, | Board of de. | Lambda Chi Alpha Alumni Association, noon, Russet Cafeteria. : Indianapolis Moter Transperfation Club, Ime., noon. Fox's Steak House. Rima Nu, noon, Cohmbla, SN n ean Veterinary ie ssociation, i 2271 Union all day. Murat Temple. mest, Mary King, at . | Marion County Fair, ail day. New Bethel. | ‘ilie. Emma Lewis. at 340 Middle. Beokbinders mion 33, 7:30 p. m., Sev- Boys erin Hotel. Henry. Ethel Brinkman, at St. Francis. Ben anal Fears Craft, 7:30 p. m,, Thali es, AEDs Fauch. at oY it : oseph, a ret Dwiggins, at City. a on Ge. 10 a. m., Hotel Washing- Morris, Susan. Bruce, wr ejoman, . rett, rah Brown. at Coleman. Pennsylvania Alumni Group, 12:30 p. m., Joseph, Juanita Faucett,

Hotel Washington. v, . ww Alumni Group, 12:30 p. m., Ho- Franeis, Cornelia Schmitt, at St, cent’s

Na hington 3 - reihofer Baking Ceo., 7 p. m., Severin Joseph, Dorothy Maloney, at St. Vin- =

Hotel. nt's. Leo, Prankie Allison. at Methodist. George, Grace White, at Methodist. William, Bernice Herman, at 563 Wilkins. James. Lena McQueen, at 748 S. Bosart.

DEATHS

William Foshee. 85, at 2402 BE. 16th, cirrhosis cf liver, Winfield Scott Orwin, 91. at 327 NorthR. R. 1, Box 589; ern, cardiac vascular renal, f 2509 Union. Maggie McCarver, 71, at 408 Exeter, carBES Senate; e:

San CO Ia™1. Payne, 51, at Methodist, sar I'S. a \ » 3 @ sar3713 E Michigan: yas

Lowell T. Schofield, 31. of 217'z N. Iinois; Cynthia L. Purcell. 23, of 2172 N. Illinois. Edwin O. Hammer. 20. of 309 S. Lyons; Mary L. Causey, 20, of 2459 Madison, Kenneth swe 33. of 1727 Blaine; Lettie F. Jarvis, 18. of 1727 Blaine. Joseph A. Drury Jr.. 21, of 111 E. Walnut, Frances L. Weidlick, 20, of 4123 Bouleva .

BIRTHS

Girls Harold, Beity Bleckensdeyer, at St. Prancis. Phillip. Mildred McGee, at St. Francis. Gariand. Ruby Meeks, at City. Oscar, Beatrice Carpenter, at Coleman. Edward. Mary Armborst, at St. Vincent's. Robert. Mary Jane Dresbach, at St. Vincent’s. Rdgar. Mary Cottongim, at St. Vincent's. Ralph, Margaret Piercy, at St. Vincent's. Harry. Mary Guion, at Methodist

Vin-

MARRIAGE LICENSSS These lists are from official records in the County Court House. The Times, therefore, is not responsible for errors in names and addresses. ————

Richard L. Miller, 28, Loretta M. Herndon, 21, o William P. Lynch, 24, of cilie M. Fritz, 20, ol James F. Petreff, 24, of

a coma. Lian C. Craney. 22, of Sherman George Levell, 66, at City, cerebral hemLawrence A. White, 30, of 1405 N. Hamil-

- : vascuton: LaVerne Ray, 23, of 641 E. Dr. Wood-| lar. |= nna. 7, OH: E4116 Yat Pip V. Smith, 28. of 5355 . De

Place, carcinoma. Jennie L. Geisel, 83, at 6115 W. Wash-

I. Esther Ellen Irwin, 72, at 1169 Reid Kenwood; Toto, 26, of 3515 NW. Penney

prevent such a move, it is believed. g

Cleveland 3 Denver Foggy Dodge City, Kas....... Cloudy Jacksonville, Fia. ..... Cloudy ansas City, Mo......Rain Little Rock, Ark Los Angeles Miami, Fla. ...........C Minneapolis-St. Paul.. Mobile, Ala. P New Orleans New York ............Cl Oklahoma City, Okla.. maha, Neb. .........P PIISburgh . .. cocoa Portland, Ore. ........ San Antonio, Tex..... San Fra St. Loui

formed on a military or civilian basis, temporary or permanent,” the circular said, adding that it was to be assumed that ‘compensation’ would be attached, if approved. Officials believed that about 263 of the women who have had more than 200 hours of flying experience

| probably could be used to ferry

transport and trainer planes, relieving the men pilpts for duty in the faster combat craft which are more difficult to handle. The Ferry Command flies the planes from factories to points in the Western Hemisphere, where the British take them for trans-Atlan-tic flights or shipment on transports. The Ferry Command and the Royal Air Force both are attempting to speed the deliveries. The U. S. Army now has some 200 pilots in the service and is training others at Albuquerque, N. M, and Barksdale Field, La. The Army also has established operational points at Los Angeles, near the big airplane

O. union or an independent association should represent employees. 5. Four hundred C. I. O. workers ended a 12-day strike at the Brown Instrument Co., Philadelphia, manufacturer of gauges for the Army and Navy. The company granted an eight-cent wage increase and guaranteed future vage adjustments to meet rising living costs. 6. Strikes continued at the Arlington Mills, Lawrence, Mass., and the Leland-Gifford Co., Worcester. Mass., halting production of needed Army uniform cloth, machine tools and trucks. 7. A. F. L. construction laborers promised a 12':-cent hourly wage increase to 75 cents an hour returned to work on a $4,500,000 naval expansion program at Portsmouth, N. H., after union and OPM representatives reached agreement on a new wage scale. 8. Strike at the Henry Vogt Machine Co., Louisville, Ky.. affecting 900 workers and called by the steel workers’ organizing committee (C. I. 0), has shut down manufacture

manufacturing companies, and at

Tampa, Fla. Washington,

Nn

pickets,

Mounted Poli

Nashville and Detroit.

ce Patr :

|of extremely important chemical equipment.

Ba SN oe 3

Cleveland mounted police go into action on a C. I. O. picket line at Lamson and Sessions plant where United Automobile Workers massed to prevent independent union members from entering. Two C. I. O. pickets were clubbed and an officer of the rival union was picked up and hurled to the sidewalk by

BRR

bee later explained. militarism, but it is Hitler who is forcing us to become the greatest military and naval power the world has even seen, and when we are that we will be safer than he is by a whole lot.”

Stra

/

If the upsets

send y

but a

u

Journal and a State Legislator, has sold his interest in the paper to Buel Ulm, his partner and business manager of the Journal. Mr. Mayhill, representative from Cass and Carroll Counties, will die vote his time to real estate. mn

uss Says:

We've purposely put this picture upside down to put the accent on the

SUMMER OXFORDS

sight of your oxfords you—if they're “shot”

from the heat and the dust and the sun—and the pavement-pounding . . . we can

ou along—in fresh, fing

OXFORDS that take only a small amount of your junds... .

2.9 and 3.95

Not much of any one thing—

great many kinds!

—Values to get excited over! First floor—straight back,

L, STRAUSS & C0. x THE MAN'S STORE

7}