Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 25 June 1942 — Page 4
PAGE 14
&
Tires Vanishing!
Guard Your Feet
«+ 2) FRONT PLANS
KANSAS CITY, Mo. Many Americans who footed”
will be ©
National dists. Since tire
next vear a larger
public will be walking instead’ of! family Hansen has prepared a “toughen the ten-
breezing auto, Dr
list of r
around in the
les to derfoot.” 1. At first, just walk
ing straight ahead. 2. Be sure rectly. Get
your
your stockings
than the feet.
3. Bathe your feet daily in luke-
warm water with castile soap.
The doctor concludes with the average men shoul to stand or walk 10 hours Women can stand or walk
opinion that be able a dav.
only about eight hours.
citizens a year roti © now will do well to heed the words of Nazi Pr. 1. A Hansen, chairman of the! public relations committee of the | Association of Chiropo-
rationing means that! portion of the Copvright. 1942, by The Indianavolis Times
until your! feet begin to get tired. Walk toe-
shoes fit cor-
from one-half inch to one inch longer
4 ‘mere bluff.”
and Neutral Press, Term Allied Pledge ‘Mere Bluff.’
By PAUL GHALI
and The Chicago Dailv News, Inc. BERN, June 25—Whatever con-! sequences the loss of Tobruk may| have upon Near East strategy, it} has certainly destroyed to a consid. | erable extent the high hopes creat-| ed in Europe by the allied promise ‘of a second front this year. : | This ie apparent in all press reports from Germany and wfeutral countries available here today. Newspapers which had published the allied pledge to Russia without comment now suggest that the much-heralded second front is a
J. Dwight Peterson
J. Dwight Peterson has been named treasurer of the Citizens | School Committee. He will serve during the campaign to choose five non-partisan candidates for | the school board. Committee members are Judge John Nibiack, chairman; Robert Lee Brokenburr, Miss Mary
A Berlin dispatch to Der Bund of Bern—apparently delayed by German censors for four dayvs—
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AUSTRALIAN FLIERS
quotes Nazi circles as firmly con- | vinced that invasion of the conti{nent if serious, would have been| nporris M. Feurlicht, Dr. Sumner | | planned and organized by the allied | pyrnjss, Mrs. Walter Greenough, | | general staffs in the greatest secrecy ars. Rudolph Grosskopf, Edward and not broadcast all over the Harris, Mrs. Logan Hughes, Harry world T. Ice, Ralph W. Lieber, Leo M. | Rappaport, Mrs. Clayton H. Ridge, Thomas Scanlon, Mrs. Chris | Schwomeyer, Thomas D. Sheerin, | G. M. Shotwell, Merle Sidener,- | Mrs. Virgil Sly, Carle Wilde, | Herman C. Wolff and Charles R. | YORE mmm {
Belcher, Mrs. John Carter, Edgar | Evans, William P. Evans, Rabbi |
Cite Peril in Egypt
Another ground for German skepticism, Der Bund reports, is the belief that England must now employ all her available forces in the defense of Egypt. Tobruk’s fall, points out the Basler Nachrichten, has generated tre-
mendous German optimism in final | $ u i victory. Between the lines, one can PREAD OF 8 i | easily read—however unpalatable | | !this conclusion may be—that Gen.' Field Marsha! Erwin Rommeis’ suc- | cess has considerably po gid ALARMS LONDON
| the effect on German morale
| duced by the heavy losses and sup. |
iply difficulties suffered during the” I Sar or. ‘Deaths From pulmonary
See Hope in America Disease Up 10 Per Cent
Allied sympathizers suggest that ; it may have been a great psycho- Since 1939. logical mistake brazenly to promise | § a second front if it will not be kept.| PY WILLIAM H. STONEMAN | Copvright. 1942 by The Indianapolis Times’ and The Chicago Daily News, Ine.
Czechs, Jugoslavs, Norwegians, Poles LONDON, June 25.—A sharp wars
‘and French are dying every day in| | the belief that England and Amer- : ica will save their countries. This time increase in tuberculosis is now | | shedding of their blood demands ef- | commanding the attention of Brit- | fective action from the allied side, jh health authorities and will be| these sympathizers say. Meanwhile, Nazi preparations to the subject of a special report be- | oppose a second front go ahead ling prepared by the medical re-| despite German optimism. Swed- search council. ish press reports from Norway speak| The war has suddenly arrested, of daily increase in these plans./, steady decline in this disease, Realistic” plans are being made which had been going on for haif| for the evacuation of civilians.in', century, with a break during the case of a British landing, and yori war, and has brought an inrequisitioning of all lorries and mo- | ;,sace in deaths from both pulmontor cars is reported. In anticipa- | .;v and non-pulmonary types of the tion of imminent arrival of new plague. i German reinforcements, the Nazi | authorities are taking over Norwe- | gian hospitals and schools. i
Death Rate Grows
Deaths from pulmonary tubercu-| losis increased by 6 per cent be[tween 1039 and 1940, and in 1941 [were 10 per cent higher than they had been in 1939. Deaths from non-
{pulmonary TB, which is less prevaFOUGHT IN RUSSIA lent than the puimonary type,
showed an even more marked inMELBOURNE, June 25 (U. P.).— | crease. ‘An Australian pilot, revealing that Deaths from tuberculous meninAustralibn fliers have been in aé- gitiss, a form of non-pulmonary tion on the Russian front, said to-| TB, increased by 40 per cent be-| day that the Soviet airmen “have tween 1039 and 1941, {the courage of lions” and rush eag-, With the exception of venereal jerly into battie although they:diseases which, in the case of} sometimes are outnumbered 10 to: syphilis, increased by 34 per cent lone. between 1939 and 1941, this jump in| | “We lost only one pilot during the tuberculosis death rate is the| two months of action in Russia.” most disconcerting feature of Brit‘the pilot said. “Our bag was 17 ain’s wartime health picture, | planes confirmed. nine probables; and six damaged. Our record com-! Mili Suppl Blamed | {pared favorably with that of the! The increase in fatalities from Russian fighter pilots in the same nhon-pulmonary tuberculosis un-| period. doubtedly is due partiy to increased! { “If they run out of ammunition use of unpasteurized milk by people lin a dogfight they invariably ram who have evacuated from cities to| ithe tail of the enemy plane and country districts and partly to the! | then baling out if they can. closing of sanitoria, which, in turn, ! “We were told that there were has led to the release of carriers. imany Russian women pilots and! Most of the non-pulmonary tu-| | that some already have been in berculoesis is due to the bovine type | {action against the Germans. some- of germ which is found in cow's (times shooting down Nazis in eom- milk. Tuberculous meningitis, on bat.” (the other hand, is believed to be EE {caused by a human type of germ and children, who are principally
SERVICES SET FOR affected by it. might easily contract | | GIRL SHOT FATALLY it from infected parents, who re-|
; turned home uncured from sani-! Funeral services will be held at toris.
| 2 p. m. tomorrow in the New Bethel
| Baptist church for Joan Brown, | 12-year-cld Wanamaker girl, wo NINE HURT AS TWO was fatally wounded Tuesday by ihe AUTOS SKID, UPSET
accidental discharge of an suri Nine persons were injured in ac- |
matic pistol in her home. Burial | wil! be in the cemetery there. i Survivors are her Sone, Mrs. ecidents involving automobiles which | argaret Brown; a sister, Patricia; | a brother, William T.: a half broth. overturned after skidding off Highs | er, Herbert, Portland, Ind, and | ways at curves early today. three helf sisters, Lucille, Josephine! Miss Connie Miller, 23, and Mise | and Francis of Indianapolis, all Jean Reimer, 22, of 1350 Wada st. | graduate nurses of St. Vincent's| Were seriously injured when the car | | hospital here. Her father, Ernest|in Which they were riding with two | T. Brown, an attorney, died two soldiers left the road on a curve in | years ago. [Hancock county. Miss Marjorie | ® | Helen Toole, 20, of 140 S. Belmont |
BAND PLANS PARTY st. was not seriously hurt. The kitchen band of the Women | Both of the soldiers were injured, and were taken to Ft. Harrison hos-
f ¢ i of the Mogse will Sonor a eard) pital. One was identified as James,
Ba aL Be A L. Thompson, 22, and the other was, not identified. i Four other persons were injured in a similar accident in the 500, block, S. Meridian st. They were Miss Josephine Golich, | 23, of 1516 N. Pennsylvania st.; Miss Carol Shrum, 24, of 1512 N, Meridian st; Hugh Turpen, 32, of 1239
Leonard st. and Charles Kelling, 39, of 4336 College ave. |
GENERAL, 9%, DEAD SOUTHAMPTON, N. Y., June 25 (U. P).—Brig. Gen. Samuel ro Tillman, ¥4, world war superintendent of West Point and oldest graduate of the military academy, died! at his home yesterday. { i
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