Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 22 June 1942 — Page 3

Sh

heme —

CLEAN UP

DEBRIS IN KOKOMO

‘Flash’ Storm Kills Fou

And Leaves 100

Red Cross Treats Scores.

Times

KOKOMO, Ind., June 22.—More than 100 homeless families were quartered in a partially completed housing project and in the national guard armory today as Kokomo residents and Red Cross workers began clearing the debris “flash” tornado which fatally injured four per-

left by a gons Saturday night.

Eight others were in serious condition in St. Joseph's hospital while a Red Cross — in the armory cared for scores suf-

emergency hospital

fering from cuts and bruises. Victims were Perry Morris, 48; his wife, Violet, 38; Edward Lazenby, 17, and Fred Long, 38.

Couple Killed Instantly

Mr. and Mrs. Morris were killed instantly when the impact of the twister struck their small home in the southeastern section of the city. Lazenby was injured when the tornado engulfed a barn in which he had taken refuge. Mr. Long died from a heart attack which physicians said was induced by fright. Four children of the Morris famflv were among the seriously injured. Kathleen, 8, received fractures of both legs and the other children, ranging in ages from two to 11, received internal injuries. Also injured seriously were Mrs. Grace Swisher of near Kokomo, an expectant mother; her three-year-old daughter, Merle Fay Swisher; Miss Donabelle Grant, 20, a EKokomo hotel employee, and Fred O’'Vodka, 16.

Fear Damage Above $500,000 Kokomo city

feared the damage caused by the)

tornado would exceed $500,000. It cut a two-block wide path through the south part of the city, demolishing some homes in one of the newest residential districts.

One of the many freak incidents

was reported by John Crume. The storm deposited two opne- -gallon | buckets of paint, half full, atop Crume’s house. Apparently none of the paint had been spilled.

Keep Out Curious

State police, Indiana guardsmen and legionnaires patrolled the area yesterday and today, preventing throngs of curious from penetrating | the devastated area.

sands of automobiles Governor Schricker, Adjt. Gen. Elmer F. Straub and Don Stiver, public safety director, were among state officials who inspected the section Sunday. The tornado was Kokomo's first in 50 years.

Clinton County Farm Buildings Demolished

FRANKFORT, Ind, June 22 (U P.) —Rural communities in Clinton

MONDAY, JUNE 2, 1048 _

officials said they|,

Roads leading into Kokomo were crowded by thou-|

TORNADO

r, Seriously Injures Eight Families Homeless;

Special

SIX KILLED IN STATE TRAFFIC

Pedestrian in City Dies; Eight Others in County

Are Injured.

One pedestrian was killed in Indianapolis and five other persons lost their lives in traffic accidents in other parts of Indiana during the week-end. Traffic crashes in Marion county also sent eight victims to hospitals. GEORGE TEMPLE, 55, of 543 W. [25th st, was killed instantly early yesterday when struck by a car driven by Phocian Allen, 37, of 2522 Indianapolis ave, at Northwestern ave. and 26th st.

Two Struck by Train

His death brought Marion county’'s traffic death toll this year te 56, compared to 71 for the same |time a year ago. There have been 38 deaths in the city. EARL: FOOR. 56, of Athens, Ind. and MISS FL.ORA HORN, 48, of Cass county, were killed instantly vesterday when struck by a train at Fulton, Ind.

CHARLES W. ERINGER, 23, of |

Sellersburg, Ind., was killed when his car left the road near Hamburg, Ind.

JOHN W. BENDING, 66, Carroll county farmer, was fatally injured when his tractor overturned. JAMES NEMECEK of New Buf- | falo, Mich., was fatally injured in an auto-truck collision near Michigan City. os 2 » | Robert Kuhn, 20, of Heyden Falls, O.. and Miss Ellen Leitmaker of | Baltimore, O., were seriously injured early today when the car in which they were riding collided with a | bus in the 5500 block W. Washington st. 2 ” ” Donald DeWar, 22, of R. R. 5 and his sister, Marian DeWar, of 49845 W. 13th st, were injured when Mr. DeWar lost control of his car on Road 67 as their pet dog jumped into his lap suddenly.

= = 2 Jethro Ison. 21, of 4909 W. 24th

st, a deaf mute, received severe head injuries yesterday when struck

county today dug out of the wreck-| age caused when a tornado demol- | ished a number of farm buildings

late Saturday. Officials of the damage was most

sheriff's office said severe at the!

small community of Moran, north- |

west of Frankfort, where several buildings were overturned Herbert Heise was treated for injuries received when the tornado struck a three-story brick building

in which he had parked his auto-| The twister erumbled the! car and]

mobile. building, forcing Heise's himself to the basement of the building. Neighbors dug ‘Heise from the debris.

NEWSPAPER GUILD MAPS WAR PROGRAM

DENVER, Colo, June 22 (U, P.).| ~The American Newspaper guild] opens its ninth annual convention today to determine how “organized

new spapermen can aid the war pro-

gram.’ Milton Murray of Detroit, presi- | dent, said no controversial issues were before the 125 delegates, and that the guild's main problem was to “do whatever we ean to help] win this war through sacrifices,|

work and co-operation, vet main-!

taining our union strength.” He said the convention was expected to be “one of the most harmonious in years.” No officers will be elected.

EXHIBITS ART WORK “Motor design,” senior thesis of Bernard C. McKay, 310 N. Euclid ave. fine arts exhibition of student work at the University of Notre Dame.

is now appearing in the annual |

by an automobile driven by Woodruff Kennedy, 28, of 4953 W. 11th st. on W. 16th st. Mr. Ison was taken to City hospital where his condition was described as serious.

” ®

Harry Weaver, 16, of 1111 English ave, a messenger boy riding a bicycle, received head and hip injuries when struck by a car driven by Richard Rilman, 16, of R. R. 1, at 848 Shelby st. =

Harold W. Gregory, 27, of 505 N. Delaware st., and Miss Helen Salter, |23, of 970 LaSalle st, riding with him, were injured when their car Stack a safety zone abutment at Blackford and Washington sts. | early Yesterday.

HE INDIANAPOLIS TM MES _ Shorten Convention to Save Tires

PAGE 3

Indiana Exchangites attending a streamlined state convention here today includes (seated, left to right) Alvin H. Huth of Lafayette, state treasurer, and N. Ritter Lavengood of South Bend, president; and standing, left to right), Ron M. Hall of Detroit, national vice president; J. Ben Roberts of Indianapolis, state vice president, and W. Bateman Parker of Columbus, state secretary.

A one-day state convention of Exchange clubs, streamlined as a tire conservation measure, was held today in the Claypool hotel, with about 75 delegates attending. The convention originally was scheduled for Lake Wawasee and

would have lasted three days. This afternoon the late Zach T. Dungan, of Huntington, a familiar figure at Exchange conventions, was to be honored in a memorial service, Mr. Dungan died last March 22 at 83. He was a former

state supreme and appellate court clerk and was a member of the state Exchange board of control. Reports were to be heard and officers elected. N. Ritter Lavengood, of South Bend, is the present president.

(Blitici

BY EARL RICHERT

THE HOOSIER PUBLIC may not be aware of it, but what has

happened during the last y®ar and short of phenomenal.

a half at the state house is nothing

That much time has elapsed since Democratic Governor Schricker

and the other elected Republican

state officials took office and there

has not been one hint of a major scandal.

One would have to go back a

long time in the history of Indiana

state government to find anything that would compare with it, and

most likely, There has been . politics, course, and plenty of it,

of

But there have been no cries |

about one particular crowd getting all the highway commission business, about paroles being

granted promiscuously, about the |

public service commission being controlled by the big utilities, about the tax board reducing assessments for favored friends,

about the central purchasing bu- | reau buying on any except the |

bids or about the being

basis of low state’s printing business given to a favored few firms. Most of this, of course, reflects to the credit of Governor Schrick- | er since he controls practically all of the state government. But the Republican side of the ledger, as far as complaints are concerned, is equally clean. The | printing board is under Republican control.

» o =

OF COURSE, there have been some very minor scandals involve ing the action of certain employees. That can be expected, however, in any organization having more than 12,000 employees. But even on that score, every employee caught stealing or carrying on illegitimate activities so far has been a holdover from the previous administration and not a Schricker appointee. There are some observers who attribute this situation to the fact that the official family is divided, politically speaking, and. | one group is trying to outdo the other. But, to the personal credit of the officials involved, students of state political history point out that there have been divided offi-

VANNUYS WILL VISIT | IN CITY FOR WEEK

Times Special WASHINGTON, June 22.—Senator Frederick VanNuys (D. Ind.) will leave Washington Thursday to spend a week in Indianapolis. He will be accompanied by Mrs. VanNuys and they will stay at the | Indianapolis Athletic Club. The senator is scheduled to speak at | the Democratic state convention in Indianapolis June 30. Office routine here will be in charge of Miss Wilma Aber, Connersville, who has been named sec- | retary to the senator to succeed Ben | Stern. A marine corps reserve officer, Mr. Stern is on active duty and recently was promoted from | captain to major.

cial families before and plenty of scandal with such a group in office.

ONLY THE POLITICIANS are interested in politics now. The folks out-in-the-sticks just don’t give a “hoot” whom any party nominates for office in the fall election. All they're interested in is the war.

That is the verdict of Winfield |

K. Denton, Democratic candidate for the secretary o° state nomination, after a trip around the southern part of the state.

” 2 2

RUMORS HAVE IT that if the Republicans retain control of the state house of representatives as a result of the fall election the Ralph Gates-Burrell Wright group

no such a similar period could be found.

| will hand the coveted speakership to Glenn Slenker of Monticello. They are reported to be determined that the office shall not go again to James M. Knapp, three times a G. O. P. speaker, who unsuccessfully opposed their can- | didate, Rue Alexander, in the state convention last week. Mr. Slenker was mentioned repeatedly as a possible candidate for the

he never entered hel race.

SERVICES ARRANGED FOR EUGENE WODTKE

A native of Germany but a resi{dent of this country and this city

secretary of state nomination but |

INDIANA BEHIND IN BOND . SALES

State Quota

Launched.

With only eight buying days left in the month, a stretch-drive cam- | paigh was started in the state today

to sell war bonds. | June sales in Indiana have fallen | far short of the quota of $14,876,200, | Bugene C. Pulliam, war savings staff state executive chairman, said today. | “Buy one extra war bond in June” has been coined as the slogan for | the end-of-the-month drive. In Marion county, where the quota is $3,347,200, only $1,096,164 in bonds had been sold in the first two weeks of June, James F. Fren- | zel, county bond administrator, re- | ported. Points to Armed Men

“Suppose someone told you that | American sailors and soldiers had | decided they wouldn't fight as hard in July as in June,” Mr. Pulliam suggested. “You'd laugh at them and call their remark absurd. “But that's about what might happen in Indiana's war bond quota campaign for June unless we do something about it.” Mr. Pulliam said it would take

Last a Drive to Meet

since he was 6 years old, Eugene | “extra bond buying—by every bond Wodtke, 2645 Brill st, died last investor in Indiana and by some night at the Veterans of Foreign new ones, too—to indicate that In- | Wars’ hall, 210 E. Ohio st. |diana’s June fighting pitch is on a

Mr. Wodtke, who was 55, had Jeurs by the Bemis Brothers Bag)

Services will be conducted at 2 p. m. Wednesday in the G. H. Herr-

St. Joseph's. Survivors include his wife, Ada: a daughter, Mrs. Roberta Depley; a | sister, Mrs. Frieda Leville and nine Stepoitildren, all all of Ci cl.

‘FT. WAYNE MAN HEAD OF BORDER VETERANS

Ray McAdams of Ft. Wayne is the newly-elected commander of the Mexican Border Veterans' association. Other officers named yesterday at the annual reunion and convention in the Claypool hotel where Lawrence G. Shannon of Seymour, southern vice president: Joseph E. McCurdy of Laporte, northern vice president; Benjamin H. Keiter of Indianapolis, adjutant; Col. Robinson Hitchcock of Indianapolis, historian; Fred Kepler of Indianapolis, mess officer, and E. A. Fulton of Portland, sergeant-at-arms. Col. Hitchcock, head of the state selective service was the principal speaker at yesteyday’s session.

PAUL PORTER TO SPEAK

Paul A. Porter, deputy administrator of the rent division of OPA, will speak at the meeting of the Apartment Owners association Wednesday at the Washington hotel, W. P. Snethen, manager of the association, announced today.

been employed for more than 35

mann funeral home with burial at el, assisted by Willis B. Connor, W.

par with that of May.” A victory sales council, designed to reach the group with large in-

| comes and corporations that can in-

vest from $5000 to $50,000, will lead the stretch-drive campaign. Edwin J. Wuensch is chairman of the coun-

Randolph Bosby, Roy Falvey, Julian {J. Kiser, Oran W. Morrissey, Ernest G. Mueller, Walter J. Stuhldreher and Cecil W. Weathers.

Your Investment—$3.96

Statistics contained in May's re- | ports showed that Hoosiers invested (at the rate of $3.96. For June the | per capita figure is to be raised to $4.33. Meantime, the war savings staff announced that the Steel or Bronze Piston Ring Corp., 546 S. Meridian st., has joined the list of firms with 100 per cent personnel participation. Eight employees there are investing a record total of 45.5 per cent of the plant's entire payroll in bonds. Other firms added to the 100 per cent participation roster are the C. B. Kendall Co., 2039 Madison ave... Thomas & Skinner Steel Products Co., 1120 E. 23d st.; American Bearing Co., 429 8. Harding st.; Ace Neon Sign Co. 2021 Madison ave, and the Weimer Typesetting Co., 32 E. Georgia st.

STUDENTS TO GIVE RECITAL Mrs. Helen Thomas Martin will present beginning and junior piano and dramatic art students in a re-

cital at 7:30 p. m. today at the D. A. R. chapter house.

LIST METHODIST PASTOR SHIFTS

Four Changes Due in City; 89 Others in Southern Indiana District.

Times Special BLOOMINGTON, Ind, June 22. --Ninety-three southern Indiana Methodist churches, four of them in Indianapolis, awaited new pastors today. The appointments for the coming year were made yesterday by Bishop Titus Lowe of Indianapolis at the closing session of the 111th annual Indiana Methodist conference here yesterday. Lee S. Jarrett of Brookville, statistician, reported that the conference, which includes Indianapolis and the whole state south of U. 8. road 40, represented 129,199 Methodists.

Local Pastorate Changes

Changes in Indianapolis pastorates are at Edwin Ray, Fifty-first Street, Forest Manor and Trinity Methodist church. Other Indianapolis pastors were re-appointed. The Rev. E. F. Shake, Edwin Ray pastor, was transferred to Seymour and replaced the Rev. H. D Bassett, formerly of New Albany. The Rev. J. Lemuel Johnson, now serving the Union Chapel church in Marion county, took the Fifty-first Street pulpit in place of the Rev. E. T. Johnson, one of the nine southern Indiana Methodist clergymen who have become chaplains. The Rev. William Nangle will take | the place of the Rev. Ernest Bailey at Forest Manor. The Rev. Mr. Bailey was assigned to Riley, Ind. Rev. C. P. Hert, who has or Ais at Trinity, was moved to Osgood and the Rev. Boyd E. | Tryon was moved from Bicknell to | Trinity. Change at Old Bethel Church

The Old Bethel Church in Marion county outside Indianapolis will be served by the Rev. William Ellis, who has been at Elletsville. The Rev. Mr. Johnson's pulpit at Union Chapel will be filled by the Rev. T. L. Rogers, from Patoka. Three important changes were made in Johnson county churches. The Rev. A. H. Prussner, who had been one of Methodism’s missionaries in Jap-conquered Sumatra, was given the Whiteland church. The Rev. G. H. Curry from Salem was assigned to Greenwood and the Rev. B. A. Morgan from Holton, Ind., was assigned to Edinburg and Camp Atterbury. Appointments in the Blooming-

ton district follow: Superintendent Abram S. Woodard, Bloomington. Bedford: First, N. I. Schoolfield: Grace, Guy Johnson. Belleville, R. R. Rowland; Bloomfield, J. E. Beal Bloomington: Arlington, H. J. Propheter; Fairview, W. F. Fink; First, M. B. McFall. Bowling Green, H. A. Bailiff; Brooklyn, R E. Chafee; Centerpoint, C. Medaris; Clay City. G. C. Baron; Cloverdale, A. L. Meredith: Cory, E. A. Hartsaw; Ellettsville, C. O. Carnes; Freedom, C. L. Carmichael; Gosport, Glenn Kaetzel; Harrodsburg, H. W. Holmes: Heltonville, R. E. Green; Jasonville, C. V. McMillian; Linton, R. B. Baldridge; Lyons, S. E. Stroud. Martinsville: Circuit. Bruce Hazel; First, F. Ra Greer; Mulberry Street, H. H. Clements. Mineral, Donald McMahan; Mitchell, J. M. Walker. Mooresville: Calvary, L. J. A. S. Schmitt. town: Circuit, R. L. Bennett; First, C. W. Scott. Nashville, Charles Johnson; Newberry, O. L. Huffman; Patricksburg, W. N. Jones: Putnamville, Lennis Donaldson; Rivervale, A. E. Chastain; Simpson Chapel, Marshall Wisley; Spencer, W. G. Parker; Tunnelton, J. D. Redinger; Waverly, Paul Burris; Worthington, T. G. Scott. Special appointments were:

To be chaplains in the armed forces: Richard F. Denbo, Evansville; R. O. McRae. Bedford; Amos Boren, Seymour; C. O. Wirey. Franklin; W. H. Glenn, New Albany; A. L. Swarens, French Lick; PF. T. Johnson, Irvington, Indianapolis; David Shepherd, Hope; Harold F. Blakely, Osgood. L. N. Abel, Upland, field secretary, Taylor university. W. C. Hartinger, hospital minister and field secretary, Indianapolis ‘hospital. J. PF. Jenner, superintendent, Wisconsin Anti-Saloon league. W. T. Jones, Indianapolis, secretary, Preachers’ Aid society. Otto Liebner, Evansville, board of pensions and relief. E. B. Marlatt, Indianapolis, dean of Boston university school of theology. BE. M. McKnown, dean of Evansville college. Emery Parks, director Wesley Foundation, Indiana university. Harvey Siefert, Evansville, executive secretary National Methodist youth fellowship. E. P. White, Bedford, conference evangelist. Cc. BE. Wildman, university. Harold Zink, professor in DePauw university. Left Without Appointment to Attend School—Guy D. Carpenter, Richard Gillum, Robert Gingery, William, Xendall, J. A. Leatherman, William Robbins, Charles P. Shulhafer, W. W. Stickford and Henry White. Deaconess Appointments—Edna L. Muir, Fletcher Place church, Indianapolis, director of religious education; arybelle Stewart, Central Evansville, parish worker; Nola D. Yoder, Glenburn, Linton quarterly conference: Irene L. Duncan, chaplain of Indiana Woman's prison—Central avenue quarterly conference; Marie Button, Highland Bay community center, Bingham Canyon, Utah, New Jersey street quarterly conference, Indianapolis; Constance Erickson, Alaska, quarterly conference, North church, A naianapolis.

sawyer; First, Morgan-

executive

president of DePauw

IN INDIANAPOLIS —MEETINGS— VITAL STATISTICS

Here Is the Traffic Record! County City Total

1941 icinnnnninenn 34 37 |

1043 ...cacceenicecec 29 37 56° —June 20-21— Accidents .... 49 Arrests 297

1

SATURDAY TRAFFIC COURT Cases Convic- Fines Tried tions Paid 22 Reckless driving. 6 6 Failure to stop at through street 3 Failure to stop at signals . 4 Drunken driving 2 All others

3

31 19

Totals ........ 60 $231]

MEETINGS TODAY

Exchange clubs of Indiana, convention, Claypool hotel, all day. Owens-Illinois Glass Co., Gas City, picnic, Riverside park, all day Marion county scrap Sabor Solimittee; civilian defense, Severin hotel, luncheon. Indiana Society of Architeets, Arms hotel. noon luncheo

Spink-

Knights of Polutnbus, meeting. 1305 N. ma

Delaware st. § D.

-

| Secientech sub, meeting, Board of Trade, { noon luncheo oat vite club, ‘Claypool hotel, noon lunch-

“Indianaplis Alumni association ot Ka | Ba a a Rho, meeting, Riley hotel, 7:80

North Side Realtors, Canary Cottage, noon luncheon, | Notre Dame club, Board of Trade, noon

luncheon BA Oe nleal Castle Industrial Onion Sounell, meeting, Amal-

gamated ha Andiana al Sli ‘club, Columbia club,

2 union, meeting,

uncheon \ Salesmen’ s club, Washington hotel, noon

un Indians Household Movers’ association, | Washington hotel, noon lun Indianapolis Women’s Trafic club, civilian defense, Hawthorne room, 8 p. m.

MEETINGS TOMORROW Tenants ol the Commodore, elviiisn defense, 3015 N. Meridian st., I

Indisnapolis Newsboys Band stam, Washington hotel, noon luncheo! Washington

Passenger's ab, dinner, Children’s Ap-

hotel, 6:30 0 Indiana u's and parel club, convention, Claypool hotel, all ay

Exchange club bbard, eeting and luncheon, Severin hotel,

ted ie ars Oe oslely, Severin hotel, 7:30 p. m. ement Dealers,

Indiana meeting,

{

meeting,

n meeting, Severin hotel, 2 p. m. Hoosier Veneer Co., Severin

hotel, 2 p United” Electric Radio & Machine committee, meeting, Severin hotel, 3 m. ary club, Claypool Potel,” noon nc Alpha Tau Omega, Board of Trade, noon Tene eon.

ro club, Spink-Arms hotel, noon

.

Merentor club, Lncoln hotel, noon lunchUniversal club, Columbia club, luncheon.

University of Syicnigan club, Board of Trade, noon lun Lutheran Men's Service club, hotel, hoon Jufichedk: ne Paper Cr group, Men’s Grill, William H. Block Co., noon lu chson Shalaty fraternity, meeting, OE. A, Y.

eon. The Forty-Niners, Columbia club, noon Tek Cent lub ti Li! -Century club, meetin hotel, night. y 5 nteln

noon

Lincoln

Nien's club, Y. M. C. A,, noon lunch-

MARRIAGE LICENSES

These lists are from official records in the county court house. The Times, therefore, is not responsible for errors in names and addresses. .

Robert J. Michaelis, 22, of 367 N. Hobe Katherine E. Kiernan, 19, of $37°N N.

ward M. Briges, 21, of 2314 Brookside; Mildred A. Garrison, 19, of 430 N. Meri-

Paul G. Webber, 26, R. R. 15, Box 700-C; Nancy F. Jam es, 25, R. R. 1 Box 700-C. Odie M. Holland Jr., 20, Le 618 Douglas; Lottie Roddy, 19, 19, of 426 B! Donal “in 1866

Cunningha of Barth; ietey 3. Theurer, ” ot 1866 Barth, toner, 33, o 6 Woodlawn; pe B. Stoner, 32, a3 13530 E. New T! John W. Good, 29, Plainfitle, Ind.; Sadie I. Griffin, 31, Alexandria, V Live fon C. Stri er. 43; of 628 Lock:

3 N. Oriental. Elkhart, d.;

Shipman, 20, of 1217 N. New Edmonson, 19, of 719 E.

Barnfield, 23, of 3961 Hartman

James H. ersey; Lois Southern oe N. drive; Thelma L. Taylor, 21, of 3055

Kenneth W. Findlay, 80, of 945 Luett; E. 16th.

Carlton . rdich, Mabel P. Fitzsimmons, 30. Buffoli, N. tin F. Chapin, 3 of Yanai BrookHe ® Delores Hearld, 18, of 2401 Brogisiae. arles J. McHu gh Jr, 864 S. Belmont; Janet Malarky, 92, of 5269 Park. Robert Sowle, 24, Danville, Ind; Ruth Savage, 26, of 140 S. Elder

BIRTHS

GIRLS

John, Bellie Rutland, at Cit Sam Mustard, at Voit. gi at ity. at y. th, at St. Vincent's. at Methodist. Winnie Wesley, at Methodist. William, Mariam Keenan, at Methodist. William, Crystal Berger, at Methodist. Everett, Katherine Swank, at Methodist. William, Harriet White, at Methodist. Walter, Olin Sauvion, at Methodist. Millburn, Lulu Sallee, at Methodist. Robert, Patricia Clark, at Methodist. i at St. Francis. ¢ "St. Francis. at St.

Ahel Eunise Lowe, at 1617 Nelson.

Kenneth, Constance Baldwin, at Cole-

an. Ralph, Esther Thompson, at Coleman. Rober. Suh Sine. oa Metho

ie wl Ruuchie” By J a Methodist.

Norman, Hazel Ross, at Methodist. Dan, June Kaufman, at Methodist. Vincent, Evelyn Langston, at Methodist. Harley, Bertha Johnson, at St.

Howard, Elfreda Sweetman, at Coeipan. Lester, Mary Vickers, at St. Vincent's Denton, Ethel Smith, at St. Vincent's, , Jane Arthurs, at St. Vincents. Harry, Ruth Brodey, at St. Vincents. Elbert, Nelma Mullen, at City. James, Anna at City. Louis, Alice Bitti, Fra Charles, Margaret Elliott, at Ste A Raymond, rtrude Fishero, at St Francis. Alva, Emma Harness, at 1906 S. Belmont.

N.| cent's

Olarence, Georgia Layton, at 1712 Col-

le _ Dominick, Margaret Moran, at 53 N. Sheffield

DEATHS Richard A. Lyons, 89, at 1844 Howard, urem u a Shae, 66, at 813 Warren, congesive Oliver M. Dwinell, 71, 2 1230 S. Sheffleld, Veerebral hemorrhag Frank 1 Thompson, 42, A htral, pulmonary em Philip Klein, 82, at Methodist, diabetes. Henry M. Wing, 79, at 5631 Rawles, brgncho-pneumonia. atherine S. Holdaway, 32, at 3325 Ransdell, pulmonary tuberculosis Lotha L. Garrison, 83, at 111 S. Ritter, chronic myocarditis. Ella Pruitt, 67, at Methodist, coronary oclusion. Wilson Eavey, 50, at Long, uremia. Sip Johnson, 65, at City, lung abscess. Mary Jones, 56, at Central, general

paralysis. i BL Behrman, 70, at City, cerebral Denford Phillips, 51, at Methodist, pneu-

George R. Hill, 70, at City, lobar pneumonia., Mary Birchfield Swarm, 71, at 3940 N. Keystone, cerebral hemorrhage. Lena Stein, 55, at Methodist, obstructive jaundice,

OFFICIAL WEATHER

U. 8S. Weather Bureau |

( Centra) War Time) 5:16 Sunset

Sunrise

TEMPERATURE —June 22, 1941— "a m. ui Jeibien vue 90 Precipitation 24 hrs. oi 7:30 a. m.

Total precipitation since Jan. 1 Excess since Jan. 1

The following table shows temperatures Mm Jther cities: on

Atlanta

Cincinnati Cleveland

nver .... Evansville, Fam, Kansas a. Miami, Fla.

Minneapolis-St. Orleans

SHLARRB20233

3233

Indi Not Beh change in tempera-

hemo Ties I. Davidson, 55 at Veterans, uremia.

ture tonight AbTough Ohio > Ya fore! Be

scattered shower:

HONOLULU, June 21 (U. P.) (De-

layed) —~Lieut. Gen. Delos C. Em-

mons invited non-essential civilians to leave Hawaii today and warned that it was dangerous wishful thinking to believe Hawaii was immune from attack because of the Midway island victory. Gen. Emmons, commanding army forces in Hawaii, especially asked women, children and dependent per-

sons not engaged in essential war work to make immediate arrangements to go. He said many persons believed— wrongly—that because of the Midway battie the Japanese would not attack Hawaii.

All Non-Essential Citizens Asked to Evacuate Hawaii

“To assume that the enemy will not return in force and utilize every weapon at his disposal is the most dangerous kind of wishful thinke ing,” he said. Revealing that the evacuation of dependents of army and navy men had been practically completed, Gen. Emmons said that now some steam=ship accommodation would be available to civilians for a limited time.

Gen. Emmons in his appeal to non-essentials to go said that his evacuation suggestion was important to the war effort of the Hawaiian department, and he invited persons who had not sufficient money for their transportation or their maine tenance on the mainland to report it.

Strauss Says:

STORE

JACKETS

chooses

12.39

Very much

get into SLACKS

sell at

343

Colorings. .

The Man’

HOURS MONDAY 12:15 NOON TILL 8:45 NIGHT

DEAR SIR:— It will do your heart good—and your wallet good— to see the wondrous

that s Store to sell at

and 16.90

Plain Colors and Stripes and Checks . . .

1942... and very

much VALUE

AND it will do you good waist down

from the to the TROPICAL that the

Man's Store chooses to

Plain Shades—and plenty of

. . Cool, Smart,

Washable or dry-cleanable. They're a BUY! Sir.

L STRAUSS & C0. we. THE MAN'S STORE :