Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 25 November 1941 — Page 3
ei eegng wa flIRN.
ation “Faces Decie sion on Selective. Service _ Policy.
By EARL RICHERT
AY i
If the U. 8 Army keeps on call-|
Ing draft registrants at the present|
rate, Indiana’s supply of Class 1-A| men will. be exhausted some time}
next spring, Stat¢ Selective Servi‘e officials predicted today. : v. assification has ‘been completed nearly all of the State’s 152 By boards and draft officials ‘es=| timate on the basis of the ‘unofficial data that there'is a reservoir of only 10,000 - ‘Class 1-A: men -in the State today. During the it year, the Army
LNT TALKED
on fd
ra
has called an average of 2000} §
" Hoosiers a month into service ‘and{ there is no reason to expect that it will call a fewer number during}
the coming months, Lieut. Col ||
Robinson Hitchcock, Selective Seryice director, said. .
Expect Congress to Act
If the 2000 men per month aver-|.
age is | , will run out of men within a few months. Draft officials ‘don’t know just what they will -be ‘when ‘they are una Army calls. They expect that the situation in Indiana is comparable to that in other States and that within a short time the national administration may be. forced to seek Congressional action to get: the-age- limit for draft registrants lowered from 21 to 18. . Such Congressional action, local officials believe, would: create a new reservoir Heke of approximately from which the Army
Another possibility is that a na-tion-wide program will be instituted to rehabilitate the men placed in Class 1-B—those fit only because of some slight: physical defect for limited military service. ‘Many of these men, .it is said, vould be made fit for Army service py medical or dental treatment, But this would not ease the situation in Indiana to any great extent since there are only 12,334 men in Class 1-B. No one can guess just how many of these men could ‘be “fixed up” by doctors to be fit for active. military service. Another : draft registration is scheduled for next July 1, too-late to prevent ithe impending’ shortage of men. That registration probably will only furnish enough to meet Army demands for a short time, draft officials said. Recheck Deferred Lists Only 20,000 men who had reached the age of 21 since the first draft
registration were registered this|
year, and the experience of draft officials is that only. one out of every 10 registrants will be found
. physically fit and eligible, consid-|: - of the interview, said that during ‘Training School head, who, under
ering deferments, occupations, etc., for Army. service. / Thus, the July, 1842, registration would“furnish probably only an additional ‘2000 men. In the few cases where draft boards already have exhausted or are on the verge of exhausting their supply of men, State officials have advised them to recheck their deferred lists. Particular attention is to be paid te the berder-line deferment cases; for’ example, where two brothers were deferred because they both contended that they had to support their parents, etc. No deferment made by 8a draft board’ for any reason is permanent. .Chief reason for the impending shortage of ‘men, draft officials say, is the ruling by Selective - Service headquarters in Washington: that all registrants: who were over 28 years of age last. July 1 be automatically deferred. ‘That ruling, they said, drastically limited the field from which new soldiers can be drawn. The experiences of Marion County’s 15 draft boards are in line with .those throughout the State. Approximately half of them have
eted elassification and all of}
them foresée..a. manpower shortage unless: sore hew reservoir | is, provided.” © © One Board Classifies 4458 ; Draft Board 1, for example, has leted ‘classification of its 4458 ts,; has sent: 225 .men -to Army, ‘and has “only 89. men. whom -.it. believes. can make 1-A. And many of these 89 1’:probably be a physically fit: when- they take their physi-
examinati fficials ‘of Draft Board 15, which’
hasn’t completed classification, . say/¢ — that they are already having a - “hard time getting men.” gos Ect, Tudista tmp sent 0. 0 y ce draft’ “started and 438 ‘more are sche to fo. in- December. ae State has a total; of 378,080 draft registrants,
IN INDIANA
Here I the Traffic Record County City -Total| Gor L132] . 122} co 1
1940 secisesssssnes 52 1341 t00000vss sens 61
«Nov, 2d *
80 61
5 §
Accidents MONDAY. TRAPFIO COURT
ered to dof’ e to meet the
ho 2 neon, meeting. 6 snd msefine ew
REVEALS TRAVIS ‘MOODY. SPELLS’
Wife Tells Police Doctor Who Killed Self Was . Often Despondent.
Emotional clashes preceding the suicide of: Dr. Richard C. Travis were described to police yesterday by his wife, Mrs. Rosemary Cutter Travis, 31, at City Hospital where she is Tecovering from slashes on her wrists. Dr. Travis’ body was found hanging from a rope in.the basement of their home, - 3345 Carrollton Ave, early Sunday following a quarrel with Mrs. Travis, who then -attempted to take her own. life, Aaccording to police. - She told -police a long SOE of devotion between Fi and her husband, but.said Dr. Travis often had “moody spells” and would become despondent. Resented His Remarks
She expla ined that on previous occasions she ‘had been able to “talk him ou of them.” Mrs. Travis, sobbing during most
a party at | their home Saturday; night with band* resented. it ' “He evidently- real had hurt me and went to the base-| ment and took his life,” police!’ quoted her (as saying. “When |'I found his body in the basement I felt that I -couldn’t face life with out him so 1 decided ‘to take i life. I guess| ‘we ‘both had" Ye mu to drink Saf rday night.”
Do S Bt Explain Note .
Mrs. Travis did not explain Why she wrote a note which said: “You have hurt me before my friends. Goodby.” i : She said; after she had went to the be
ccording to police, that cut her wrists she sement again to help
failing, asked her -step-son, Richard T i :Jr.,: to- call police. - Funeral services - for - Dr. {Travis were held at the Flapner & Buchanan mor tuary today. Cremation followed. \
CHARG ES 3 DETROIT © FIRMS WITH DELAYS
DETRO . Nov. 25 (U. P).~— George F.: <A des, secretary-treasurer of the United Automobile Workers (€. 1. 0.) charged four Detroit automn ile ‘manpfacturers today with excusable| delays” . in producing bomber- parts and assemblies, He also agtused unspecified West Coast gonis ictors of rejecting parts approved in| Detroit and the Army Land Navy | ‘of making ' frequent changes: in design after tooling has been started. He charged delays ‘to the Chrysler Corp, Hudson “Motor . Car Co. Bri Many facturing Co. and the y Body Co. - He said the Eord Motor Co. appeared to ‘be the only Detfoit: ma nufacturer “getting {shines a 2
ne friends, her hus-{2.
Dr. {Trays | cl bvm ‘from: the rope-and,|
* Edward F, ‘Burke and Lieut. Ashley . . . they teach photography.
oc
8 2-8
Methods of
mostly in the mystery writers’ realm. ' And a man got to be a policeman when he donned his uni-| form, ‘pinned on his badge and | learned to swing his club in meaningful manner.
Times Have Changed :
Today in. the classroom at Police Headquarters, a man who learned policing in ‘the old, blunderbuss” school of trial and error showed Indianapolis .policemen how much times have changed. He was Edward F. Burke, Eastman. Kodak Co. - photographic expert, and ‘former identification bureau lieutenant: of the: Rothester, N, Y., police foree. Mr, Burke will instruct Indianapolis policemen for
la week. - Beside him sat ‘another
man who was a rookie in the days when training consisted of being “broken in” by a veteran who had been “ “broken in” by another veteran, He was. Lieut. Carl : Ashley, Police
Chief . Morrissey, is teaching ‘police the best methods oft
: %h “Crime Films “Mr. -Burke flashed ‘on: the class-
Co
room screen as fascinating a. series
of ‘crime’ and- accident’ pictures as any policeman has been privileged to- see... The: class watched in rapt
{attention ‘as the expert narrated the
background of each picture and told how. it was.taken.. He explained how X-ray" point-
‘ed out the diamonds hidden in .the
wordan smuggler’s - high. heel. Behind the note ordering the bank to pay the bearer thousands of dollars, infra-red pictures showed an ‘erased recommendation for a chauffeur—erased but for the signature. Smudge Betrays Him
Spectroscopic photographs jdentifled the tiny smudge of dirt on the shoulder of burglary ‘suspect’s sweater as putty. And the photographs convinced a jury the suspect was the burglar because the
matched those in the window putty. Ultra-violet, too, has sent men to jail’ for crimes which 10 years ago would have . remained . unsolved. Photographic . .devices are making ¢ife tough ‘for clever criminals, ‘One of the latest. stunts is a motion = picture ‘film taken of a drunken: driver at “headquarters. They show the film to the defendont just before he goes .into court. Usually, they don’t have to use the film. He pleads guilty and after he has seen himself, they say, he takes ‘the pledge.
2 DIE IN TRAIN WRECK OMAHA, Neb., Nov. 25 (U. P)— Two trainmen were killed, three others: injured and 21 box cars destroyed by. fire in a wreck of. two freight trains at Edson, Wyo., early today, Union Pacific headquarters
i ale Tau (Omega, luncheon, Board of Trade, noon.
’s 15 | Arrests creas i220 Board of ofc
mag fay ation, ] Bh ledtun ae xder of Severin Hotel in Chemien ; mest SER at
Th ncheon | a noon e haenl , Tunen-
Indiana ETH! GS TOMORROW IS Apstiment o Ow pI tion, uneh:
g fers € h AL: T:30 Dp.
] here announced.
o Club, I nghetn, Spink-Arms Hotel, Tunty,
eciure. :
Brett, Ln of
EEE S402 a Hor. Eg derick, M
ye
. 81 T Victar 'E Cherry. HE 16 N. Sena 3
a. Er Ch, 7
mieten A ae RE dinner, Hotel
6 p. m. jana Council of Parent Teacher Association, mee Schoo! 130th St.," 1:30 p. m. Colonial Boston Chapter, ' Internationsl Jravel Judy ol Club, luncheon, Marott Ho-
MARRIAGE ‘LICENSES These lists are from official records in the county Court House. The Times, therefore, is not responsible for names and addresses, ; oie
BE La ee %.% of
arbert, of “9041 'N Par $53 Far Parkway. “Soins 17, City.
fontain
ble, 3 ‘MichiEE 2, of 28% W.
WRT 21, of 35 W. rola;
Police Here Learn Scientific
of ‘here as, he fled hours after the girl's body ‘was dis-| °
spectroscopic lines from the smudge|”
7:30p.
a Rasidents of the: wnilp’ 2 | osidents of, the, township Jivice | @epartment becausethey would not | {only have to pay taxes to supports
gd
“{the
8 8 8
Solving Crimes
By RICHARD LEWIS
The cots chamber in the smuggler’s shoe was: found with. X-ray. A spectroscopic photo cracked the ‘mystery of- the unseen burglar and |infra-red caught the wily forger literally red-handed. A dozen years ago, the smuggler would have gotten away. burglar could have bluffed it out. ‘The forger would have committed: the perfect forgery. In those days, scientific crime detection existed
The
MINISTER'S SON GOES ON TRIAL
West Terre Haute’s Beau ‘Brummel Accused of. Slaying Girl, 12.
TERRE HAUTE, Ind, Nov. 25 (U. -P.) —Cozzie M. Jones Jr., West
Terre Haute beau brummel, goes on
trial today, charged with first degree murder in the- death of 12-year-old Edith Idell Barton, whose nude body was found in Sugar; Creek April 21- » Jones, 26, the son of an umordained minister, pleaded not ‘guilty when arraigned on ‘charge June 2. He was arrested .e at miles west
covered ially submerged in water near the creek bank
“been out with the Barton. girl” and| that her ‘body could be “found” by
the creek.”
Following his arrest,’ Prosecutor H. ‘DeWitt. Owen’ and Chief of De-
‘tectives Thomas Welch said Jones confessed attacking the girl but de-
nied slaying her. They quoted Jones as saying the girl fell into the creek from a bridge affer leaping from his car. ‘Two days after his ‘arrest, the youth attempted suicide. in his cell by slashing his wrists, police said. Jones was paroled from the State. Reformatory Dec. 13, 1940, after serving a little more than one year of a one to 10-year sentence for auto theft.
MATH EMATICS CLUB MEETS TOMORROW
The Mathematics Club of Indianapolis’ Public, 8 “Schools will meet ‘at tomorrow at School No. 32, allo NAT nois- St. ’ A panel discussion. on: “Arithmetic in General Education” will he: held:|Miss ‘Ada -Coleman, Manual ‘High School teacher, will lead” the discussion. © Other members of ‘the panel. will .be Mrs. ‘Gladys B. Tyndall, School No. 39; ‘Miss Hazel Bonke, School - No. 60; Mrs. Nan<| nette Love, Schogl No. 61, ‘and. Miss Grace Blackmore, ‘School No. 33. =
~ ACTRESS ASKS DIVORCE + LOS ANGELES, Nov. 25 (U.P) .— Ann Baron, movie actress, cherged in a divorce suit today that her husband, Actor Edward Pike, refused to give up . for’. a :quiet: home life. - They were married: last June| and separated one Week ag9, she
*
J said.
1:73, at 4101 E.
*"Bvirting, 2 2, of 807} srkway; cis. ¥. Winkle, 16. RR. 7; Box 3m; , U. 8. Navy: Beatrice] -
3 "he Howard, at Su
Wh
Girls prapomas, Dorothy ° Dearring, at St.
Woodrow, Marie. Prank, at St” Prancis. Luth
rie ‘Ellis, Coleman. : Marjorie yy at St. Vins
oe aries, Lois Carmony, at Meth Willard, ‘Beatrice Peay, 8 | Charles, th Kinney, at ‘alias a Brode
Ne rick, : Louis, ‘Della Harris, at "535, & 28th. Samu, Catherine Dennis, at. 2005
|: foot a few!
Police said Jones left home after| reporting to his father that he ‘had |
Jon at City, carcinoma. |" Wim : pes 5 at 3030 N.. Penn.
Indianapolis Fire : ip also ‘the township unit.
iwnship residents. living outside
|the City contend that a fire de-
partment. is needed to serve the growing. community. ig is: Believed that the Tax’ Board
|will restore the fire. levy to the
‘budget; increasing. the township tax rate 3% cents. In another opinion to the Tax Board Mr. Beamer ruled that counIty Tax adjustment boards: have no jurisdiction -over funds buggesed for. teachers’ salaries.
Boards Have Full Power
This ruling has the effect of making school boards the:supreme au‘thority in fixing: appropriations for salaries of . teachers and other employees ‘hired under contract. + Teacher "contracts are signed: in May before the review. of the budgets and the Attorney General held | that the contracts made by school boards are binding. The question as to county tax adjustment board _ jurisdiction .over teacher. salaries was raised during the recent. State Tax Board hearing on the -$6,000,000 Indianapolis School budget. .
Believe Buralars Killed Attorney LEESBURG, Va. Nov. 25 (U. ~ P)) —Police believed today that Ward - Loveless, Washington tax ‘ attorney, was murdered by bur- |X glars ‘whom he surprised looting his: country - estate near here, ‘Mri Loveless’ ‘bullet-pierced and badly beaten body Was found, yesi LS Ris . Y 8 ef dont <hat hers had been a “terrific struggle.” Police held to the burglary | & ry after . questioning : friends "Mr Loveless who said they believed he. had no enemies and revealed that he usually carried large ‘sums ‘of money. . His wallet wes. ‘missing.’ ng i)
BRIDGES’ ACCUSER LIED, LAWYER SAYS
- WASHINGTON, Nov. 25 (U. P).— The Board of Immigration Appeals today studied charges by’ counsel for Harry ‘Bridges, -C. I. O. official, that the only - testimony he was a Commupist came from a “biased liar” and a “perjurer.” » The evidence ‘and the legal questions in the seeond deportation proceedings against Bridges were. reviewed at a hearing yesterday. The board must decide whether to upHold. or reverse the decision by Im-| migration Examiner Charles By Sears that Bridges. should be sent. back to his native Australia. Mr. Sears’ decision followed a secgh ond hearing in San. ‘Francisco early | this’ year. Dean. James M. Landis of thé “Harvard ‘Law . School had ruled against deportation after the original hearing in 1939. The new, ‘were made possible by. Congressional amendments to the] immigration Jaw. .
|1eveled at Harry Lundberg, rival for ldbor leadership : West. Coast, by: Attorney ne Gladstein of San Francisco. Gladstein ¢harged: that. Lundberg’s interest was to: .preserve, extend and de-fends-the- position: ‘he how holds in
ges
{labor sircles, :
POLIS, TRAFFI ¢ RECORD, WEATHER oU TLOOK.
at’ city] acute
Jang Noble Goiduman, 47, aortic stenosis
ize Hiatt, m° ‘at .Central,
sylvania, acute Eas: 2 ig min Delagr
o Prek Bar 65, at Long, empyemas. rl Bourne, 39, “at 2473 'N. “Rural, mer
* Grace Pearl ‘Gardier; 43, at Methodist, peritonitis. D. Stevens,’ 78, at 3550'N. Keystone,
stat
Nathaniel, Elizabeth Madden,’ at = 919 James, Rebecca Davis, at 1809 Lambert. Boys Waskel, Kathleen Lambert, at St. Fran-
“Charles, Edna -Schisser, at St.. Francis. amy Cleo Grace Hardesty, at St.
Horace Ruby Lawson, a 8c Bradshaw. Boga.
ERE
Capitol.
sumonia, ald o Bra 65, at 3138 EB. Fall Creek
Mi Hubert” Payton 5%
he
{cluded among 19 at Indiana Univer- . | Kappa, national honorary scholastic
A Spr ing.
‘Porte; sociology; Jerome Finkelstein,
rein’ .
"| Roosevelt had declared territory
The charge. of “Biased lar” was lat:
ange, 8, at Long, tumor i
B avid Viscui Senat. 7, st Riley, hypo-| .
nie” porter irkbatelet, 8% at. 1002 A, ho.
‘Three children were burned, of- them seriously, when & ied, Sue old ‘boy threw gasoline ‘into a hot stove at their home, 1222 Beecher St., yesterday. ' ‘Ralph’ Jones, 14, son of Mr. and Mrs. John Jones, was playing with his sister, Mary Elizabeth, 11, ‘and other, ‘Robert, 4. ‘According ‘to lice, ‘the. older boy tossed: the gesoline from a car through the ‘open door of a stove just as Robert was passing. ‘There was ‘a flash and - the ye unger childs head ‘was: enveloped
Robert Jones . . . seared by gasoline blast.
|cipal, will introduce John M |assistant in the personnel dep
| Leaders in. Borie
Professions to Speak At Tech Forum. Tech pupils are going to
3 from men in business how to i about getting jobs at an open forul P to’be held at the school today.
Hanson 'H. Anderson, Tech pi
DQ
ment of the Eli Lilly Co., who will discuss “Occupational Opportuyni
“land Responsibilitfes ‘Awaiting B
|p. #5 Amanda Anderson, of the Big Four
.Afterwar ors, group. ‘meetings will be
| held, ‘with the following speakers:.
COMMERCIAL OPERATIONS .— H. Gillespie, chairman: :Miss
- | Railroad office, and A. F. Williams,
> Sugational secretary of the Y
YM.
SALES OCCUPATIONS — 1}
| Ann Thatcher, of the co-ordina
.|placement office at Tech, chairman;
| ior of the wm. H.
ein: flames. Mary Elizabeth, standing nearby; also: was ‘singed. by the blast. . Ralph was burned. on the hands. and face. al The explosion singed some of the hair on the younger boy’s head and his face was’ badly burned. Their screams brought Mrs. Pauline -Adams, a neighbor, .who called police for an emergency ambulance, and all three were. taken to City. Hospital. The two older children ‘were treated and-released. ‘Robert's conditon was reported as “fair.
19 AT I, 0. NAMED TO PHI BETA KAPPA
Times Special . BLOOMINGTON, Ind., Nov. 25.— ‘T'vo Indianapolis students were in-
sity named today to Phi. Beta
scciety. Qne was graduated last
: Local students and thelr major Subjects are Jo Anne Pierpont, history, and John-Whitiiger,. governwent. - Others | ‘were ‘Mary F: Rees, La
Jacksonville, : Fla, ” ‘Righig. S 3 ADC othy Sloan, psychology; Harry Littell;~ Bloor. ington, 3 overnment; Donald -Fox-| anatomy; James Pitman Ly “Bloomfield, emistry; {John Reinhard Jr. - Wash: iC., chemistry; . Hadley Conn,’ Danville, chemistry; Mrs. Betty Crawford Moran, South Bend, English; Theodore E. Bockstahler, Blooming- “| ton; chemistry; Leonila. G. Badger, {Washington, D. C.,: Spanish; Norman Hasler, Worthington, chemis|try; Jean Dickson, Lowell,” mathematics; James Henley, Carthage, economics, and John Smith, ‘Floyd |. Knobs, astronomy. The 1941 graduate who was honared was John C. Barnett of Winamac.
FREE FRENCH SEEK .LEND-LEASE ‘FUNDS
NEW YORK, Nov. "25. AU. P)~— Free French officials here. prepared | today to. expedite United States Lend-Lease aid to the armies - of Cren.. Chailes De Gaulle ‘in. Africa and Syria. . They S hiouficed ‘that President
- n
held’ by .the” ‘Free French vital to ‘| American” ‘defense and had; ordered |Lease-Lend
goverment;
“= EXPERTS. TO JUDGE |,
ator Edward | Shints.
Catches Red Fox At Hosiery Mills
: WALTER TEAL, captain of ‘Real Silk Hosiery Mills ‘night police, didn’t shout “Tally-Ho” but he did catch a red fox last evening. As Mr. Teal was patroling - the south "part. of the. company grounds near Cincinnati and North Sts. a fox trotted by. Without a ‘word Mr. Teal. jumped on the fox. - "Then the problem arose as-to what to do with the animal. It was shapping and yapping vi‘ciously, and Mr. Teal, who is not
that a fox in the hand was not |pi worth two in the bush. ~~: ‘A driver for the General: we fo
mal, so. Mr. Teal: fave oH Ap-tin, ‘strings: -attached. nd
ST. MARY'S PAINTING
. SOUTH BEND, Ind. Nov. (UP). ~The. nation’s: foremost —-
‘authenticity of the Giotto de Ben‘dene painting of St. Francis of As-
lege, to - establish “*beyond any reasonable doubt” that itis a genuine work of the 14th century Italian master, college authorities said today. x -Bister. ‘Madeleva, head of the cols] lege, will visif the Mellon Art Galleries at’ Washington “to obtain the assistance of experts. The wood-panel painting, if gendine, would be valued at approxi-
estimate by Dr. Maurice, Goldblatt, Chicago ‘art dealer. Giotto founded a school of painting ‘in his’ pestod and ‘was much imitated. Many. of the paintings concerned St. ‘Francis,
‘experts ‘will ‘be -asked-to judge "the ¢
sisi discovered ‘at St. Marys Col- | for. him,
mately $500,000, according to -an{doWwn by
Miss Ethel Jdrrett, training direts lock Daa Harry Oakley, field
distributive occupations, at og gists University Schdol of F on.
SERVICE - OCCUPATIONS Mrs,
‘| Geraldine ‘Moorman, head of the ent - ab:
Home Economics Tech, chairman; BE. E. Keller, ecutive: secretary of Ee In Restaurant Association, and Wi Jordans superintendent .of the Rich man . Brothers’ Tailoring Co,
B. Myers, executive secretary of the Construction League. "DRAFTING—V. ¢ head of. the ‘Tech drating d ment, chairman, and Ernest RCA Co. draftsman. : ] ICITY—H. Floyd
ELECTRI [head of Tech’s Electrical shop
t, chairman, - and
par ‘Gatigh, electrical engineer,
ment By pad Tl and 1 Moore, training director = for Allison Division of General M Corp. Ci “Speakers Fepréseniing professions s in the group discussions. will be Dean M. O. Ross of the school of business administration at Bu University, business administration; Prof. W. A. Knapp, assistant deant
of the State Board-of. Health, m icine; Dean ‘Robert. Sanders, In
a fox hunter by choice, decided {de
tors Truck Express Co., was at the I IT .| plant and offered to’ take the ani- |chs
serted: ¢ 22,500,000 of its members had vo! Mrs, Mary B. Bena! Src. fy blamed Mr. termed dis
“After a. that Wendell kie is a “man without party fide Mrs. Benadum said: f - “Had he adhered to the reso nized Teagon and rule for he w y ig em of government as the founding fathers, fearlessly .and courageously with the Republican ue as a check and balance : reasonable Néw Deal policies, eign’ ‘and domestic;
?
most important of the 14th eeritity present
uld: not. Tare reach wo ave reached
R. Stettintus, Jr.; to arrange pasistance or: De: Gaulle’s forces:
FOUR) GOING To NEWORK
a, ‘Tndiandpolis men will atinference which opens Thursday Hotel Commodore in New "oi for a three-day session. They’ *C. Drake, vice presi- € cient of. Alpha Gamma Rho; E. Mayer Mahon€éy, executive secretary. of po. Alpha; Bruce H. MéIntosh; administrative: secretary of pn Chi Alpha, and Malcelm C. evel, general: Sal of. Sigma’ Nu.
OFFICIAL WEATHER
sl s. Weather surehn | ; INDIANAPOLIS FORECAST — ~Fair to
ar and tomorrow; lowest tonight about 2.
Bunrise .,... 8:42] Sunset: ...ois: on TEMPERATURE . . . ~=Nov.- 25, 1941 LS Mesosess 9 foe M.oeoosse 40
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pene wes E Wright, “n,
verly, at 50 Patterson,
DEATHS
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ha warmer ww oraze. crriEs,
J Amarillo, Tex. aedeens. lear 303
recipitation 24. 8 Mix an... a3
2 a in. Station Stump, N. D. bower a-PiCIdy.
e National Interfraternity}
partly: cloudy ‘with. rising ‘temperatures to-| -
= >
Sri
and get
But—most
: thin,
| Say
+
With the inp in. TEMPERATURE —men—
in great numbers—drop. — at THE: HOME OF THE OUTERCOAT
themselves stibided i‘
pint the chills and blasts
and ea of wich
this. i is a foretaste!
-
PRICES BEGIN. at 1015: nl
Fg “> tah
. poll the way 0 fhe moon—
INPORTANT—
“The: fost at YOUR price?” 5k im FLOOR the...
kn SR 5
=, =
