Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 12 September 1941 — Page 11
FRIDAY. SEPTEMBER 12, 1941 New Toup ee > Hailed c as
"3000 SOLDIERS ™ Coy Boon for Bald Heads GET RELEASES| : CHICAGO, oath 12 (U.. Pa ) —A; the ‘biggest bugaboo to. wig wearers|
toupee manufacturer, who believes|in centuries. The “imperceptible” | : bis prada oe ou a nt ita geo tic io ir] for Dees FeO ovationrone gree from 8 receding hair Hne to| QUOtes From Lincoln ‘Who Drone baldpates Ta Hew outiook oe ty whey d dermatolo- Urged Action Aganist Agitator. Ly WASHINGTON, Sept. 12 (U. Po.
can Legion Group Warns Members to Do. Own Thinking. bi MILWAUKEE, Sept. 12 (U: P)—
45th Division's Enlisted
‘Men to Leave as Year's Ugh the ay wien der) : article in ‘the magazine S cure Service Ends. Hi A aril pur | for commen, baldness str. Hard. bank, Cal, wig maker, said the new- | Wick said, “men who are bald LAKE CHARLES, La, Sept. 12] oth bi Sines is the “hair-| continue to have but two alterna-
AU. P).—The 45th Infantry Divi-
‘sion prepared today to release 3000 * ‘enlisted men on the eve of the na-
. tion's largest war games in which Shey were. to participate with the}. d-Army.
= gi -are;. men from Oklahoma,
“s. Joolorado, New Mexico and Arizona
-
who enlisted for one year after Na-
“tional Guard units in their states
ee ee:
=
were mobilized Sept. 16, 1940. © | a ‘War: Department ruled that although : President Roosevelt ordered that National Guardsmen and selectees may be held in service, the men who enlisted in National Guard units after those divisions were inducted into Federal service must be released at the end of their vesdla shlistment period.
7 Always Low Prices at Rost’s Indiana’s Leading Jewelers Since 1886
agement Ring and 3- {| Diamond Wedding
-blighted romance and stale jokes his expense...
growing treatments, “except
toupees.
Association,
“superior intelligence” hair when they lose their own.
witha
oH 0d
NH,
line? n old-fashioned toupees
J
late hair line ‘which would solve tives—to oman] bald:or to wear a all ‘the bald man’s woes, including| toupee.” =.
Mr. Hardwick discounted all hair-
£2 Solo Ee nd On that leading psychologists and even among he Suideels ot British physicians are boosting the new planes dispa ussia
Dr. Morris Fishbein, editor of the| tion with Russian pilots. Journal of ‘the’ American "Medical added. the verifying paper’s observation. that women show their|said that British technicians have by. buying!accompanied the planes to Russia
Mr. Hardwick termed the “down-|eration, but- that British pilots are over-the-forehead, straight h a i r|not likely to go: to the Eastern
*' SOVIET PILOTS GET ~ SPITFIRE FIGHTERS
in LONDON, Sept. 12 (U.P.).—The
latest-type Spitfire fighters, some of which already have gone into ac-
‘A dispatch written by the newsdiplomatic correspondent
to instruct Soviet pilots in their op-
N ers
\
Two Exelusive Styles
Hse
; porter asked.
] conclusions, ” Mr. Stimson replied.
—Secretary of War Henry L. Stim-
measures against. Civil ‘War “agitators.” He said during a press conference that Lincoln had defended his imposition - of ‘death penalties for Army deserters during the Civil War in a letter in which Lincoln also pointed- out that steps should be taken to “silence agitators.” Lincoln felt, Mr. Stimson said, that such steps not only would be constitutional but would be great mercy”. as a means of protecting soldiers.
Thinks. Morale Injured “That applies to 1941?” a re-
“I leave you to draw. your own
“Oyr country does not change much fundamentally.” ‘ Mr. Stimson noted that there nad been “debate going on outside the Army in which critics under our rule are ree to criticize the whole purpose for which the Army is being trainéd.” “That does not make for improved morale,” Mr. Stimson said.
Old Officers Weeded Out
He added that he was, from first hand observation, “glad to see that the morale is not so ‘hopeless as | some might think.” ‘He noted that the Army was now taking a step to improve leadership ‘of the forces by weeding out incompetent officers and specifying maximum age limits for officers on field duty. ”
Lux Tanndry
for Better Service
son asserted today that criticism in|&% some quarters. of the motives. for which the new Army is being Bi trained “does not make for improve-[§ ment of its morale” and recalled | 8 Abraham Lincoln’s “advocacy © of |
Capt. John :D. Halliday was
farer, American . merchantman, which was sunk last Sunday night * 200 miles south of Suez in the Red
: EX-LOCAL MAN SUED
BY U. S. FOR $4307
Judgment of $4007.98 against
olis newspaperman who was married to the late Mrs. William E. English, is asked in a suit filed in Federal Court yesterday by District Attorney B. Howard Caughran. 3 ‘The judgment is asked to cover an alleged deficiency in irficome taxes paid on the estate of Mrs. English, who died in 1934. Mr. Prince, according to the suit, was both the executor and sole heir, and on June 30, 1934, transferred $22,818 in assets from the estate to himself. That, according to the ' complaint, left the estate without assets to pay the tax. ° Once a reporter for The Times, Mr. Prince is sald to have lived in New York for several years.
FOUR DIE AT PALERMO
ROME, Sept. 12 (U. P.).~—The Italian High Command said -today that a new British air raid on Palermo, Sicily, had killed four persons, wounded 12° and damaged buildings. In a raid on Palermo last
Phone BR-3461
gweek the British killed 41 persons and wounded 56. :
captain of the S. S. Steel Sea-
Frank J. Prinee, former Indianap-.
: m spite of grave world events af- |} § |fecting the United States, the | American Legion's foreign relations - |committee sald today it saw no
reason to alter its previous opposi-
| tion to “involvement in internation- ‘| al disturbances.” ral
The committee admitted in a report prepared for delivery. at the Legion’s: 23d national convention opening here Sunday that it was watching, + “with : growing: snxiety. the impact-of events of steadily in creasing and + more far-reaching import of the United States of America; and its position in world
© At the same time the committee said it was “equally aware that the belligerency of the Axis ers and American aid to Great Britain: under the Lend-Lease Act and through occupation of strategic bases in the Atlantic, may at any moment produce changes which may alter the entire outlook overnight.”
Warns of Propaganda
believed it “doubly important for
to watch developments closely, ‘to do our own thinking and to analyze propaganda, ‘whether it emanates from abroad or at.home’ (as stated by our worthy predecessor committee); and to reaffirm our readiness to assist the national cause as our national leaders may demand.” The committee's statement was na Ghairman Harry A. . ver, and signed by his fellow members, Adrian. IL. Bushman, Clayton, Mo.; Anton T. Me. Cook, Hartford, Conn.; Drury M Phillips, Huntsville, Tex., and Robin S. Kirby, Charlotte, N. C. It was announced also that the report had the “unanimous:approval of the national executive ¢ommittee and that it was in essence the same report made to the executive group
‘at Indianapolis.
However, the executive committee at that time also passed a resolution urging President Roosevelt to employ Navy and auxiliary forces to ure the safety of American vessels and their crews against ate tack rom any source, This droused criticism from the
all members of the American Legion
Free Debate Assured Ny
The report stated the committee |
and endorsed by them May land 28.
Students’ Sizes in
_TWO-TROUSER SUITS
NNN Eee
One of the outstanding creations in non-interventionist America Pirst
¥,
MARCO 3 V
3 Ley on
3
oo
Wedding band.
1 / 9 9 9 il 0 : ; gl) 9 : 9 / / ; / a : /
Rings
REEL EEE
‘Indiana’s
for
ee a oe
. Diamond Bridal Sets are the new
“GARDENIA” designs pictured at left. Delicate as the petals which inspired ‘their name, these sets are
Both 99% &
amazing values at this low price.
3.Diamonds glori- 2, fy both engagement Ring and |
Headquarters
Wedding Rings Choose your Wedding Ring from
Indiana's largest assortments —- at “attractively low prices.
_ Diamond Set Wedding Rings $15 Up Smartly Carved Wedding Rings $5 Up
-
»
aC REE
CCE o SoS
ee ee
standing. value. oF
Sy
oy NNN
5 a3 <a sb
. For 55 years Hoosier. brides have chosen "A Diamond from Rost" because of its sparkling beauty, exclusive design and out-
Open 20 Sr fe = PAY WEEKLY ||| | OR MONTHLY. |}
3 ‘No‘Interest ‘or Carrying Gharge' |
EOE
SER
a
eT PEE
ee
~—N
NNN
— =)
BOAT
a
CREE
MILLER-WOHL fs your headquar-
| ters for STYLES ‘to please the
school crowd. Our stocks are complete -and assortments are: large.
Come early - tomorrow for special ;
‘values.
NEW FALL - Button front and slip- - over styles. Fancy knit patterns, in nas] colors. Sizes 32 to 40 Others U p to $2.99 Main Floor
79°
“Special Group
‘SWEATERS
‘All colors. Many styles.
NEW FALL SKIRTS
Plaids, corduroys, flannels, Pleated and ‘flared styles inal) the, wanted
colors.
$1 to $1.49
"SKS
ivies 5 ea
59
or School - For besioons § ©; For Streetwear, Hundreds. of Summer
‘DRESSES
Originally $3 to $6 ;
5] w $2
Sizes 10 fo 20 and 38 to'dé
BASEMENT
J munity: as it gitempts to
Committee and a demand that Le--gion Commander Milo J. Warner, Toledo, O., “announce whether the Legion had ‘been committed in advance of the convention to suppert of the Government’s. foreign policy. Commander Warner, upon his arrival Here, asserted that delegates | would be allowed full oportunity for
- Good Neighbor Policy
Closer relations between the United States and the: South and Central America’s was recommended in Mr. Sullivan’s report in the
tyranny elsewhere in the world
fully p for the independence and prosperity of the Americas.” Chairman, Warren E. Atherton, Stockton, Cal., of the Legion’s National Defense C ttee, noted in his report that “th is more than sufficient seriousness to the situation for all responsible Legion officers and :leaders to give all possible attention to ‘the problems which ‘are arising im each com-
the potential machinery for an adequate home defense establishment which, when perfected; will meet all possible demands Which may be made upon it.” -
PUERTO RICO SETS ! ' RECORD IN BUSINESS
SAN JUAN, P. R. (U. P.) —Puertr Rico, at the end of the first six months of «1941, ‘ registered a new record in the rising activity of business: and in’ ine, s standard of living of - the populatién, according to" the Chamber of : Commerce ‘of
survey, draws ‘attention to the fact that government “is the largest in-
| “Employment is'.at an all time high,” says the: survey, “and all indications point to. still better employment levels in the’ ‘Winter of
4
2 BROTHERS TRADE PLACES IN DRAFT
‘worked ' a . doubleEe pets Supposed to go intorthe Army, stay-
RE
home aud. Tony, wito was de-
lt
Hr
knowledge that “the triumph of]
free discussion of .vital questions.
would immediately challenge thej entire economic policy now so care-|
Puerto Rico, which, in its monthly |§
| MARION, Til. (U. P)~Tony and} Racine
19 93
The BEST value we know of in suits at this price! Smart new herringbone tweedsr-with “LONGER coats, single breasted and
three-buttoned! Plenty of handsome ‘browns, blues! And a quality that will withstand plenty of
punishment!
. Granitcuna 4 Tip Coals ~~ Overcoats 5.98 | . 21.93
The NUMBER ONE coat for students, 2 Breasted
Boys’ Finger=-
hei wl. front! Girls like them, heal, 33 to 40. too! 12 to 22.
