Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 24 June 1942 — Page 2
SE 5 n 5d Bae de ay oss
WEDNESDAY, JUNE 24, 1942 War Moves Today— a
PAGE 2 aan
NAZIS MAY RISK | Azemises DASH IN DESERT
(Continued from Page One) to of the war, designed primarily to force the prime minister}
(Continued from Page One)
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ssi THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES oe ee t Where Do We Live? Ask Any Numb SIGNS NEW BILL Just Where Do We Live? Ask Any Number ERMENTS Of Northdale's Numberless Residents HITLER FACING ON DEFERMENTS orthdale's Numberless Residents| ES numbers. This they sent to the number used to be 5726, called 1 AST CH ANGE’ 3 postoffice, from where a man was | the planning commission a week LIF. D. Rs Action’ Also Puts| a headache since—through 10 | gispatched to the community to | ago and they told her the num- : fault of the commission. inform all residents where they | ber should be 5820. She put up Dependent Aid Program It was discovered previously | ved ES fie new Juter, Bus wil mek Even . if He Wins Oil in 2 ; . yu y Now, © . e own, she’s going that what was thought to be 58th The: 5 q A Sach - 4 postoffice sent the plat | leave both . to give up the post of defense minister. Into- Effect. | st. in Northdale, which is outside | | TA PEHOTCE SCCh CLL Bab | leave numbers up just in | Near East, Prospects The criticism of Churchill was centered on a motion (Continued from Page One) Sie Oe pn eo copy was to be made. ev» None Too Bright . . gy 4 all. vy- « W J . holding him responsible for “the disaster at Tobruk.” It : ; h of What had | : won ALTHOUGH THE Eberhardt . sively to be large enough to fur-| one block south © a : ; ; was not believed that his leadership was threatened unless nish sufficient Support to warrant| been called 58th st. » | Notw the Postoffice Dietz family lives at 5715, Mr. (Continued from Page One) the axis forces advance into Egypt, but the prime minister’s upsétiing established families. Hey sored i 4 Viagk Sun, | Can't Find the People Dietz knows the number should | ined by the lack 6f manpower, critics were unusually active. x 3 The act authorizes the drafting was dubbed Northgate st., a mat- BUT THE COMMISSION never pe Yo (or 5817) and fo is wii and the food shortage apparently is So serious was the situation, in which even members 3 ered en out Shilgren ter which only recently She 19 sent a plat back to the postoffice —_— ko i getting serious. ad - . i ing : : d of those who have children| i, attention of several of the | and for the information of the . Russia’s ace in the hole in standOF I ow EA Ce demining 2 when the supply of single meh is) regdents there. commission, the postoffice doesn't The most confusing situation, |, , against Hitler is the great shakeup, that he may fly back to London from the United exhausted. =. i like that. however, concerns the number, war production center she has built 3a thay : : COURCE i i 155535 Pavable.as of June. 1: ; 5810. This one is posted on both States where he is engaged in a council of war with Presi-| ; | Payable as of June A Myr. Foster Decides — & Sahoe Sw, he Does Ss coe Ir loser) Hoili up it the Urals and beyond. Great dent Roosevelt. a Richard Allen Beam . . . his oF. ones payments yl be as po Make Some Signs people live out there. Dudley S. Jackson, which are a |industrial cities have been created, j Watned of Angry Temper E - Christmas present amé back. une p==when-the $38 minimum W FOSTER, of 5827 Kings- -| At times this situation gets so | considerable distance apart. such as Sverdlovsk, Magnitogorsk, : ; = = : pay seale: for service men went into) W. W. nr ile driv that h i becom A check with the planning com- |Chelyabinsk and Novosibirsk, with It appeared doubtful that Churchill would be ousted by effect—but because of administra-| ley drive, got tired of people driv- | bad tha Sinpives ot g Pai 2 tue planing a a i 0 a vote of no confidence in his conduct of the war, but there 14 HOOSIERS ON tive difficulties payments will not ing. up all hours of She night sighs Byserch ans ik ehhe SAh ue sopontes iad do peptiels was strong possibility that he might be stripped of some a ain mill re a Nov mathe some signs. out their troubles. Some call | You ye 5 Xijow the lot num- | Loss of the Baku oil Sons, seen. of his powers—he is minister of defense as well as’ prime 1 for five months. | «I painted them,” Mrs. Foster | their newspapers, ors ge e house numbers. (ing to the best available In: ol inistr f def ight b 0 ASU ALTY LIST This table shows the allowances proudly exclaimed, and Mr. Fos- Of course, if you want to go | In the city directory, Mr. Russell | tion, would not cause Russia's m bib Coan ; 5 | : is listed livi 5706. . minister—and that a new ministry of celense mig . : payable to dependents of the four| ter put them up. One marks sted as living at 5706 tary machine to bog down
The city planning commission | British information is that the oil has the right numbers, in case |fields which the Russians have any Northdale residents are won=- |puilt up in the Urals and central dering, or wandering) and the |Asia are capable of producing about number is LI-3311. After getting [8,000,000 tons of oil a year. To this the number, the people can sign |is added vast stores of oil which the a change-of-address card with the |Russians have been shipping eastpostoffice and that should [ward from Baku and saving up. straighten it out. If worst comes to worst and Hitler Meantime, the community {is |overruns western Russia, the Ruse known to department store deliv- [sian army has only to fall back ery men as “no man’s land.” across the'Volga toward the Urals A “One of the worst situations |and let Hitler try to pursue it we've ever had,” said a planning |across the interminable stretches of the interior.
down deeper into this mess, it was created. lowest grades of enlisted men in the| Northgate st. the other Kingsley
further mixed up in 1940 when, i i i i : onsent of the county Churchill was warned in a trans-Atlantic telephone " : army, navy, coast guard and ma-| drive and Ss Se oh south with the © call of the angry temper over the Libyan defeat, marked 4 City Men Are Included; rine corps: The map shifting .
commissioners, a city ordinance Govt. Soldier was signed by the city planning | was passed which made Kingsley today by the introduction in the house of commons of al None Reported Dead [Wire no cid .... 83s so sy'| commission, the county commis. motion placing direct responsibility on the government for w 8 22
drive what it is today. 1 chil sioners and the county surveyor. Formerly it had been Buckingthe desert defeat. Or Wounded.
: I re oD That made it legal all around. ham ave. but since there was a Forty-four Hoosiers were listed as
A domentente The only trouble was that two | Buckingham JSrye ow i a ] : blocks then had 5800 house num- | view, the city o cials deci Heating tne ners Of ns fain Ne ry Nave: missing—and none dead or wounded . e pers, a perplexing situation which | Kingsley drive would be a nice Alec S. Cunningham Reid, and an independent, W. J. Brown,! : ; 1 parent, 2 sisters . 25 . : ” : ; “?|—in the navy’s fifth casualty list,| class B. it there is The motion, which will be voted on after a full debate in released today and covering a pe-| also, Class A de-
still persists despite all that seve | name. o eral governmental agencies can do. The William Porters, who used pariiament, said that “nothing less than a complete recon- vn Way 1 dune § neg ] {3 clusive. | struction of the government”); ! ”
Some time ago, the city plan- | to live at 5722 Kingsley drive, now Four Indianapolis men are among: l parent, 2 sisters. .
ning commission made a plat of | live at 5818—in the same house. 3 the area, with all the correct Mrs. George Coupland, whose | commission official. Acid Indigestion can restore public confidence the missing. They are: Relieved in 5 minutes or in the government. Richard Allen Beam, seaman first
class, son of Mrs. Elma M. Huberti, No Successor Is in Sight
2004 E. Maryland st. : Charles Frank Craig, coxswain, Tablets. No larative. whe eomfort in a SNEHISE HOUSE - CERF Wut son of Nelson Emanuel Craig, 35 N. $13, Sfadoubla Four money Back on netara of bettie | introduced by a group of house of geile ave. ; meeps commons rebels, including Sir John| Clarence Nixon Day, seaman first Wardlaw-Milne, former War Min-|class, brother of Mrs. Violet Otte, ister Leslie Hore-Belisha and a/933 Park ave. ° | group of iaborites. Julio Forest Smith, machinist’s WEEKLY The British anger was greater/mate second class, son of Mr. and Jol ang]: than in any previous government|Mrs. Gilbert Sherman Smith, rural crisis which Churchill has faced, {route 5, box 242. GLASSES such as Singapore, but he had great Total of 2101 Missing “YOU NEED strength in one great factor—no : ; one in Britain, no matter how bit-| The new list, for the nation, listed ter the atacks on the prime minis-|98 dead, eight wounded and 2101 | ter, has brought forward a man|missing, including men in the navy, { deemed capable of stepping into his]marine corps and coast guard. | shoes. | The navy's total of dead, wound- | Recently Sir Stafford Cripps was|ed or missing announced to date pointed to as the hope of Church-| totals 10,000. iill's opposition, but the collapse of] Seaman Beam’s last letter to his| his negotiations in India dimmed| mother, Mrs. Huberti, was written his star. Feb. 4, 1942. It was brief. He said, “Hope you folks won't worry about me.” And then he told his mother that he loved her.
Her Gift Returned
Mrs. Huberti bought her son a Christmas present, a shaving outfit
Briefs and a box of candy, but it was
NEW Z5LAND FESS Guanes returned, just as were her letters WELLINGTON, New eZaland,|to him during the last few months.
i —
AYRES & DOWNSTAIRS % STORE The Suit You Love y
Your OPPORTUNITY! In Smart Summer
Buy Several Pairs of These Smart Versions That You'll Wear All Day Long!
99 price y
A
Mons
$5.00
3 » Pp td eR con
Seconds of Higher Qualities
ARS
Telegraph
June 25.—(Thursday)—(U. P.).—An earthquake rocked Wellington at {19:18 p. m. Wednesday, and while there were no casualties, masonry | fell from the parliament buildings | and show windows were shattered.
AS TE TI | A JAPANESE CLAIM
AS EXAMINED BERLIN, June 24 (German BroadYou can’t do your work efficiently icast Recorded by United Press in rain, Seadaches hervousness, a8 New York). —A Transocean agency a pealth Thiet on-tosdate * equip. J| dispatch from Tokyo today said that ment used! Japanese troops occupied islands of rer ————————— the Aleutian group off Alaska with- | out fighting and “only two marines Or A G MIESSEN | were taken prisoners, the remainder ly | having fled. Registered Optometrist With Offices at the
PENNSY BLACKOUT SUCCESS PHILADELPHIA, June 24 (U.P). ) —State defense council officials said 5 | today that eastern Pennsylvania's J 7 |dusk-to-dawn blackout test last o - |night, although marred by con- | fusion, was “nearly the real thing.” Believed the largest yet attempted {in the East, the test covered 31
FTIR 29 ON TKE CIRCLE
2 Doors from Power & Light Co.
She had mailed his 21st birthday card many weeks .ago—but it also came back. “Look at the bright side of things,” friends have told Mrs. Huberti, she related tearfully. “But how can I?” she asked.
DECATUR POWER TO RESUME DECATUR, Ind. June 24 (U. P.). —Resumption of full power service here was expected by tonight or tomorrow morning as workmen rushed construction of a special line from Indiana Service Co. lines to the De-
| will provide 3000 kilowatts of power, (an output equal to that of the tur|bine which exploded Monday, cut-
|counties, affecting 5,600,000 persons.
catur municipal plant. The line
ting off the city’s electric supply.
. HOOSIER RETAINS POST WASHINGTON, June 24 (U. P). —A senate interstate commerce subcommittee after a brief hearing today approved the reappointment
of John W. Scott of Indiana to his second five-year term on the federal power commission.
Sizes 38 to 42 —for Women!
Every woman who wears sizes from 38 to 42 loves a dress with a definite “suit look” . . . a dress that will carry her smartly and comfortably through the livelong day! Such dresses are THESE . . . flatteringly designed in acetate seersucker, so soft and cool . . . or in Duco-dotted Romaine Sheers, accented with white.
Left: Tailored seersucker suit dress in brown, blue or green.
Right: Romaine sheer dressmaker suit in black or navy with white Duco dots.
Downstairs at Ayres.
Fabric play shoes in a gay assortment of styles and colors—for every summer= time costume. Platform soles, wedgie styles, strap sandals and lace styles. Choice of red, blue, white and multi-colors. Sizes 4 to 8% in the group.
—Downstairs at AYRES.
WE'LL GO ~ FAR # NEEDED
Foie is a luxury we may indulge in time of peace, but not in war—especially that failure, most ignominious of all, which comes from lack of trying. In pe sion peacetime far too many of us are prone to say: “ Thus far we can go, and mo farther. That can’t be done. Why should we attempt the impossible?” But not in war. In war we strive to excel in all things, even in sacrifice. The men in our armed forces offer up the most—their jobs, their comforts, their liberties, their lives. At home we pay our taxes, lend our money, give our money, deprive ourselves of many a possession deemed necessary in time of peace. Thus bound together in a brotherhood of sacrifice, we exercise anew our privilege to pledge—as did the founding fathers in 1776—not only our lives and our fortunes but also our sacred honor. To do consistently more than is expected of them, rather than less, is a point of honor with the railroads. Even before the war they were fighting off the manifold discouragements of the depression, striving to maintain their properties in readiness and schooling their organizations for an increased traffic that at times ‘threatened never to reappear. Thus fortified, they have successfully weathered up to now their wartime tests, facing
the final blow tion for doing
new power in ment and our
in the public’s victory—and
traffic levels and tendencies dismayingly unprecedented. They have even met with composure the recent ruling that further expan.
have to be limited by the greater priority of supplies ing forces. Faint heart might have considered thm
Yet the railroads say: “We're not going to be licked. We have discovered wells of capacity within our plant which we did not know existed. We have found new car space and
inventiveness of our family of workers, in the co-operation of our customers, in the consideration of our courts'and commissions,
beyond.” And that’s the kind of productiveness —under difficulties—that will war and the peace. :
of the railway plant would
t our fight.
and the one great justificaa poor job or a small one.
the planning of our govern. managers, in the loyalty and
will to wins We'll carry on to
win doth the
HOT- WEATHER FASHIONS WITH EYE-APPEAL A Brand New Shipment of 4
“FRUIT or ne LOOM”
A sell-out the first time in stock! We're ready again tomorrow with a big NEW ship« ment of these popular Pinafore Coat Dresses . , . with
buttons to the hem . . . in 4
front or back. They're in “Friut of the Loom” percales . « « in plaids of polka dots. Sleeveless, low necked and beruffled for coolness.
- Sizes for Misses and Women!
Left: Style 206, in plaid, button rout, red, blue, green; sizes 12 to h x
Right: Style 203, in red or blue with white dots; button back; sizes
Other Summer Cottons at $2.00, $3.00 and $3.98
SEERESS
99
yw Alternating Colors!
Navy.
Hollywood Pattern 667
37% yards of the above material. of material and
florals and checks. Nice colors.
SEW and SAVE SEERSUCKER
s% Pin Stripes! ¥ Narrow Stripes!
Lovely seerecss seersucker in washable fast colors. 36 inches wide. Full bolt lengths in Blue, Green, Red, Brown and
Make the lovely dress sketched with Hollywood pattern 667. Size 16 requires
Cost
pattern only ........ 5244
Combed Yarn Chambrays . . . ... .. 39¢c Yd. Fine combed yarn chambrays in remnant lengths. Stripes, checks and plains. Many wanted colors.
80-Sq. Percales ve er err ees 33¢ Yd.
Full bolt pieces from a nationally famous mill. Many colors . and patterns to choose from. Washable, fast color.
1000 Yds. New Printed Seersuckers . ... 39¢ Yd.
Remnants of printed seersucker from 3 to 10 yards. Stripes,
OTT
day broadcast.
Sewing School Demonstration Thursday, June 25th
Miss Bess, Sewing Instructor of Ayres’ Sewing School ‘of the Air (8:30 Tuesday morning, WIRE) will be in our Downstairs Yard Goods Department for the last time, all day Thursday, June 25th. She will demonstrate her Tues-
_
"BUSTER BROWN"
Playtime Anklets
1 Qc Pair
Brown” anklets knitted of Durene yarns, famous for ty, to wear with slacks, play suits and active sports dresses.
from wanted colors and white. Pifst quality and some |} . Irregulars, Sizes 6 to 10%. .. .-—Dawnstairs
at AYRES. ..
