Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 29 May 1943 — Page 3

unwarranggd confidence.

invalids and special diseases. experts in interndl medicine, . surgery, obstetrics, pediatrics, dermatology and diabetes.

»

Save Rags

DON'T THROW, away - those old rags around house. WPB workers fn urging all householders to turn in rag salvage to their nearest junk dealer. The reason: Men in the armed forces need rags for wiping and

» »

a 8 =

Appliance Dearth

these days, and distributors are

5

soon to WPB.4 * ®

Odds '

' Ends

requirements. . . . All applications the mails by midnight June 10, or Aug. 1, ... Farmers a

- ne Wartime Living - Problems of Invalids' Diet Pondered by Physicians

By BETTY MacDONALD Times Special Writer . WASHINGTON, May 29.—Because so many doctors have appealed to OPA for aid in dealing with special invalid cases under the rationing program, a committee of physicians and specialists has been formed to decide dietary - policies keyed to needs of

uses; factory workers need rags for machines.

THE ELECTRICAL appliance picture is anything but rosy

adequate repairs won't answer the problem of rapidly diminishing stocks of toasters, irons, washing machines. An industrial advisory committee is now investigating possibilities of limited production of some of these household appliances, and they'll submit results

CIVILIANS will get 30,000,000 cases more canned fruits and vegetables from the 1943 pack, since the government reduced its

re urged not to send their ration books in to city relatives, else they'll defeat OPA’s ration system and upset a program based on s0 many people not using all their points.

>

Included on the committee are

cleaning in hundreds of military

o ” "

alarmed by the fact that even

» s

*

a

for ration book three must be in they won't be processed till after

Your Health

Its Combat

Fever Helps the Body in

in Wartim

With Disease

By DR. THOMAS D. MASTERS Fever is a constantly recurring phenomenon in every household. It is frequerttly the source of undue worry, or may be the source of

misconceptions attendant on it. The temperature of the body in

At any rate, there are numerous popular

health, determined by a thermom-

eter placed in the mouth, varies around 98.6 degrees, Fahrenheit.

~~

Y Yvody maintains - 80 slight a va-

- environment capable of varying

/

“and by the evaporation| of the

|

«

through Monday. Stamp 1 ; good for five pounds Tuesday and

to ‘at the Stage Door Canteen to be . given by the Indianapo

show at 8:30 o'clock, and dancing,

Harry Bason, local radio entertain-

~ Variations occur in the same individual amounting to & difference of one to one-and-a-half degrees, with i the maximum in the late afternoon or eve- ij ning, and the ‘minimum in the § early morning hours. It is remarkable that the.

riation of temperature in an

over 100 degrees. This phenomenon is made possible by the heat-regulatory mechanisms of “the body, which are brought about by a balance between the loss of heat through the skin and lungs - and the heat-production resulting from the chemical Processes of the body.

Children Affected Most

Heat-loss is accomplished in a number of different ways, which the most important are heat-radiation from the skin, ‘warming inspired air in the lungs,

sweat.

Fevers are usually higher in infants and small children because their bodies more nearly approach the form| of a sphere than adults’. In the former, the mass of body which prodiices the heat is greater than the surface, where the heat is lost, thus handicapping the mechanism that brings about the heat loss, and resulting in a wider imbaldnce between heat-preduciion anfl loss,

Most fevers are due to infection. The infection acceletates the heat-production and .at the same time reduces the heat loss. The poisons liberated by the infecting organism cause a constriction of the blood vessels in the skin. The contraction reduces the temperafure of the skin and brings about the chilly sensation or chills that usher in many infectious diseases. Of course, it also prevents the dissipation of heat through the skin. Later, when the body tempera-

ture reaches a @ertain height, the

blood vessels are relaxed, the blood flows. through the skin, the skin becomes flushed, and one feels hot. These processes have the effect of adjusting the body’s thermostat to a higher level.

Sweating Aids Recovery

As the fever subsides, sweating occurs and the evaporation of moisture brings’ down the body temperature until the heat balance is restored to its normal level, or the thermostat has been turned back. Sweating is associated with a reduction in fever. Unless the fever is of high degree, it should not be looked upon. as” a reaction detrimental in itself. On the contrary, fever is an important aid to the body in its combat with disease. There is therefore nothing to be gained by undertaking the reduction of a temperature of moderate degree, but when the fever exceeds 103 degrees in an adult, or an additional degree in a child, the administration of extra fluids, cool sponge baths, and aspirin will usually serve to. bring the temperature to a more mdderate level.

RATIONING DATES

Canned Goods

Blue Stamps’ G, H and J expire June 7. Blue Stamps K, LL and M expire July 7.

2 Meat Red Stamps E, F, G and H expire Monday. Red Stamp J is good; K becomes good tomorrow; L, June 6; M, June 13; N, June 20. All expire

June 30. Coffee

Swamp 23 good for 71 pound through tomorrow. Stamp 24 becomes good for one pound Monday through June 30.

Sugar

Stamp 12 good for five pounds 3 becomes

BNA BRITH PLAN ‘STAGE DOOR’ SHOW

Service men and women and USO ‘cadettes will be entertained tonight

‘lodge and auxiliary of B'nai B'rith in the Riley room of the Claypool hotel.

* Mayor Tyndall will open the

‘a floor show and sandwiches will be provided. Headliners on the floor show will be Frankie Parrish and

ers,’and the WIBC Jamboree.

Dance music will be played by Belle’s Sharps and Flats, a 16-plece all-girl orchestra. | +» Mrs, Dorothy B, £5 of the polis Servi Centers is ‘arranging for Cadbttes, and Brith | susfilary has

expires Aug. 15. Stamps 15 and 16 good for five pounds for home canning through Oct. 31.

Shoes

Stamp 17 good for one pair through June 15. Stamp 18 becomes good for one pair June 16.

Gasdline : ~Stamp 6 in A book expires July 21. Tires " Second Inspection Deadline: A book vehicles by Sept. 30; B's by June 30; C's by Monday; Commer-

cial vehicles every 60 days or 5000 miles, whichever is first.

~ Fuel Oil

Stamp 5 must last until Sept. 30 for heat and hot water.

BRADSHAW NAMED FOR WMC JOB HERE

Wilfred Bradshaw, former judge of Marion county juvenile‘ court, was nominated by President Roosevelt yesterday as area director of

manpower commission. J. Bradley Haight, Indiana director of the U. S. employment service, was reported to be an earlier choice for the position, but a senate committee was asked to defer action on his nomination.

WOMAN DIES AFTER FALLING 3 STORIES

Mrs. Lydia Patterson, 69, was injured fatally late yesterday in a plunge from the window of her third-floor apartment at 142 E. Ohio st. She died in City hospital about two hours later. The coroner's office said that an examination showed that her throat had been slashed. They said a

|bloody knife was found in the |

‘of other nations to

~ |directly on Stalin's statement be-

the Indianapolis office of the war)

ULL SILENT ON

STALIN LETTER

Also Denies Knowledge of Report That Standley Wants to Quit.

~ By UNITED PRESS

Secretary of-sState Cordell Hull today reiterated that he was pleased with the dissolution of the Communist International, but declined direct comment on Premier Josef Stalin’s ‘statement on the move. Stalin said in a letter to a Reuters news correspondent in Moscow that dissolution of the Comintern “puts an end to. the lie” that Soviet Russia had any intention of intervening in the internal affairs “Bolshevize”

\

them. Hull said he .could not comment

cause he had no official report on it. He called the attention of reporters, however, to the statement he issued 48 hours after announcement of the dissolution was made in Moscow. He said at the time it was “welcome news” and would “contribute greatly” to allied cooperation during and after the war. No Word on Standley

At the same time, Mr. Hull said he had no official- information at all concerning published reports that Adm. William H. Standley has asked to be relieved of his assignment as U. S. ambassador at Moscow. : He said he had no information on any phase of the published reports, which said that Standley was resigning due to dissatisfaction with the conduct of American affairs in Moscow. The reports had said that Stand-

By RICHARD LEWIS The name is Michael O'Shea. He's. the movies’ newest newcomér and one of the few citizens of Hollywood -who can make it stop raining. It’s ‘a gift. “We rolled into Pittburgh on this little tour and it stopped raining,” said O'Shea. ‘The Chamber of Commerce loved. us.. We left and it started raining again. Same way in Cincinnati, We ‘come ‘to Indianapolis, and the sun is shining. I' don’t know how I do it. Tomorrow I leave: Rain.” O’Shea’s tour will ‘break him in as an actor, or just break him, by showing him: to 11 prominent booking spots in the country, including Indianapolis. He's the co-star with Barbara Stanwyck in Hunt Stromberg’s “Lady of Burlesque,” his first picture. : $80,900 a Week

Stromberg found O’Shea playing the part of Pvt. Thomas Mulveroy in “The Eve of St. Mark.” He -sent a note backstage saying he wanted to talk to O’Shea. “I thought it was a rib,” said the actor. “I sent the usherette back with a note saying my bottom price was $80,000 a week. In the second act comes a note from’ this guy saying okay, buf we’ll talk salary later, and this is soon followed by Mr. Stromberg in person. “Not only him, but there were four other big boys out there and they all spotted me. All my life, I have been waiting for just one scout to say a kind word. Now, four of them. “I wanted to sign up with all four, but I found you can’t do that. So I signed 'a seven-year contract with Stromberg on the back of a postal card he had in his pocket, only I

ley was irked by the fact that the former ambassador to the Soviet, Joseph E. Davies, had been assigned to carry a special message to Stalin instead of its being sent through him. If Standley had resigned, or indicated intention of resigning at an early date, Hull normally would be one of the very first to know ghout it; It was conceivable that Stand-

didn’t get the $80,000 a week. Paid the Bill

“I felt so important I went out and walked in the front door of my hotel and paid the bill.” Edward Francis Michael O’Shea is a thickset, ruddy, fast-talking veteran of _show business in most of its muftitudinous forms. He is married and has two kids who are

ley might have sent some message to the White House about which! Hull had not yet been advised, but there was no comment at the, White House.

“Dissolutien Is Timely”

In his letter to the British correspondent, Stalin said that the dissolution of the Third International facilitates the work of patriots in freedom loving countries for unity of all progressive forces in the! struggle against fascism. “It exposes the calumny of ad-

labor movement to the effect that Communist parties in various countries are allegedly acting, not in the interest of their peoples, but on orders from the outside,” the letter said. “Dissolution of the Communist International is proper and timely becduse it facilitates the organization of the common onslaught of ‘all freedom loving nations against the common. enemy—Hitlerism.” »

JAPS, CHINESE FGHT ON GROUND, IN AIR

y UNITED PRESS Japaness, air forces, punching

ahead of the ground offensive in China, raided Liangshan, 110 miles east of Chungking today, as an aerial fight developed to accompany the ground struggle along the Yangtze river. Thirty-six bombers hit at Liangshan, railroad town,’ and caused a long air alarm in Chungking itself. Chinese planes hit for the third straight day at enemy positions at Ichang, The Japanese headway in the drive apparently aimed at. Chungking itself had slowed considerably in the face of bitter Chinese resistance. American forces drove on the last enemy positions on Attu as Japanese propaganda reports said the U. 8. troops had suffered setbacks, and added that the Japanese garrison had been reinforced.

versarise of communism within the|.

MINERS END WALKOUT

‘—All mines in the Sullivan .area

“up in the hotel room erying for bread and making me work.” “I was born,” he says, “at a very early age in Hartford, Conn.’ the | home of insurance and Michael O'Shea. My folks were poor and downtrodden, so I went to work. “First of all, I was named Edward Francis Michael after a bunch of uncles. One time, later in life, I visited one of them to make a touch and he put me to work as a bricklayer.

4 Bricks at a Time

“The eastern style of bricklaying —I don't know how you do it out here—is to lay one brick at a time. O’Shea laid four. You know how the locals hang around a construction. job? Well, I gave ‘em the old three-a-day. “I am the only guy in Hollywood who ‘didn’t sell papers. At first I worked in a drug store. The ordinary soda-jerk, you ask him for a soda and he makes you one. O’Shea, he has to juggle the glass and throw the ice cream in the air. So I was fired. “Then I had a band. We called it O’Shea’s Stationary Gypsies. If you got time, 2 tell you the story of that.

“You see, first I'd been working in a carnival. I was the guy who

O'Shea, Born af a Very Early Age, of Last Is Riding the Highway fo Hollywood Fame

Michael O'Shea . . . the kids are up

hollered: ‘Hurray, hurray, hurray, thirty beeootyful girls, thirty’ . . . and you'd wind up inside ‘with five tired dolls and a three-piece band. “So I organized my own bgnd. I played drums by ear, but when I got to be leader, I didn’t have to do anything but wave a stick around and think, I thought we would get into the big-time scratch and go to New York where all this scratch is. “So we went and stayed about 20 minutes. Back to Hartford. We weren't ready, I guess. Played by Ear “We got a little more polish and then Wade a second try. We wound up in a very lovely place in Jersey called ‘Jake's Grill’: It was $25 a week and. all the spaghetti and meat balls we coud eat. “Finally we worked over across to Manhattan in the 55-cent blue plate belt and we presently find ourselves in a Hungarian restaurant where they have plenty of goulash and, brother, that goes a long way. “They had guys wandering around playing the accordions and guitars, pausing by a table that looked good to pick up a slow. buck on a request. They called themselves gypsies. They were strictly from hunger.

“Well, for a long time I had been »

thinking we ought to call ourselves

something * besides just O’Shea’s

band. Flaunted Knowledge

“Other people did and sometimes | it was not nice. So I said what's the matter with calling ourselves | gypsies, too? “We all hated the piano player in the band who had been to high school and flaunted his knowledge, so when he said we couldn't be, gypsies beeause gypsies go places, | five boys hollered in unison: ‘we’ll be'

IN. THE SULLIVAN AREA

SULLIVAN, Ind., May 29 (U. P.).

were at work last night after 150 striking miners at the Baker mine returned to work yesterday. The Baker shaft was the last struck mine to resume operations. The walkout started last week when the men expressed dissatisfaction over the slow progress of negotiations between the coal operators and the union for a new Appalachian soft coal agreement. Reports from Terre Haute show that some shafts, including the Blackhawk, Snow Hill, Fayette and

4 BUS LINES IN EAST END SUNDAY SERVICE

NEW YORK, May ‘29 (U. P.).— The eastern gasoline crisis today forced four bus companies, which’ operate 80 per cent of the city’s | busses, to suspend service on ‘Sundays, Peginning tomorrow. John E. McCarthy, president of: the Fifth Avenue Coach Co., said. week-day schedules also will be reduced.

0. E. 8. TO MEET TUESDAY

* The Beech Grove chapter of the

O. E. S. will meet at 6:30 p. m. Tues- |

day in the Beech Grove Masonic’ | temple. The worthy grand matron |

will be a guest and .degrees will be

Saxton’ mines were still idle.

conferred.

HERE IS THE TRAFFIC RECORD FATALITIES County city, Total

20 | Arrests 7 | Dead FRIDAY TRAFFIC COURT Cases Convic- Fines Tried tions Fal 3

Accidents Injured

Violations: Speeding Reckless driving Failure to stop at

Drunken driving All others

Totals

EVENTS TODAY

Poppy day, sales by American Le; gion ALY and Veterans of Foreign Wars. Indiana Federation of Dust Office Clerks, meeting, Antlers hotel, day. Indiana section of FiicX Institute of Electrical » Ragintess, meeting, Antlers

library, NR Central ana Coaching conference on peace 10dia1 Rober Park Methodist

church, 7:45 p.

EVENTS TOMORROW Memorial day services: at cemeteries and monuments, porade through downtown streets, 9:30 Indians ariisis * exhibit, Herron art mu-

all Indiana Federation of Postoffice Clerks, meeting, Hotel tiers, all day. tr —————

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

Leo Martin Fahey, 22, 501 N. Riley; Mote garet Josephine Adams, 19, of 6066 W. hs Rural

ngton James: ‘Henry "Graves, 49, of 62 S. Lillian Sophia McCalister, 35, of Charles Dallas Huffman, 26, Coal City, Ind.; Marguerite Livingston, 21, Bloomington, Ind. James Anthony Kuhn, 19, ne 8. navy; Enid Swink, 16, of 1830 N. ot, Tally Jacl tte, 25, U beth Jane Diehl, 2 ilimoot,

otel, 8 p Indiana - Poetry society, meeting, Central| N

: John ‘Dain, 21

: william army; | sylvia, Audrey Lo at 1134 - Rentueky.

John James Sweeney, 31, of 528 Arbor; Marie Sweéney, 35, of 521 rion. Clifford ‘Tate, 22, of 278 Reisener; Mary Martha Cole, 23, of 2322 W. Walnut. 9| Robert Thomas, 21, of 1619 N. Arsenal; Cecil Ophelia Brown, 17, of 1818 Cornell. Charles Willlam Ullrich, 21, U. S. navy; Dory Anne Kernel, 19, of 5260 E

Washington. Frank N. Wwiils, 41, U. 8. army, Patterson field, i Flora Rachel Powell, 44, of

368 Wwint Francis Ivan Baker, 25, R. R. 3, Martinsville, Ha; Sun Maxine Martin, 21,

of 109 r. Jossph TO Brewer, 33, of 346 N. Sates alee Overturf, 25, of N Oakla oi William ‘E. Bristow, 25, of 1135 Fletcher; BleLors Cecilia Heck, 25, of 855 N. La-

I Robert James Blackmar, 30, of 3210 cons fall Therese Cook Moran, 28, of 1512 Meridian. Webb Ww. Bracket, 46, of 21% 8S. Iilinois; Drape Jones, 47, of 1024 Elmer ing, 46, ‘of 1037 W. Mich- » isan; Veda Burton, 40, of 1027 W.

Michigan David Cohn, 25, of 1901 Juion; Ruth Margaret Hale, 2, of 40th. Aaron Blanchard i 30, of 1645 / 0 Burs Virginia Mae Bowles, 24, Fugen Dalzell, 25, Pt. Mary ® Elizabeth Garrett, 34, of RW,

U. 8. my, Robins fleld, Juanita Marie Rum ey, 22, of 3310 ~ ‘Meridian. Charles G. Doriot, 65, of 5633 Wisthion; Joy Leona Shiapunr, §7, of 322 E, 31st

BIRTHS 4 TWINS Edwin, Erma Hassell, at St. Francis, boys. GIRLS

William, Ma. Simpson, a City

George, /R t t Bt.

Waller, Ru Thoin Hof Methodist.

Ocielee ar at Seethodst. a Alberta a Sukder, at Methodist. Dorothy OBE nt tet at Methods.

Lloyd, Ina Weaver, BOYS

Vineent's.

I I £ Alvin, In lia Lee, at City. Wi am, Mattie Scott, at a . Fred, at St. Vincent's. William, Cathleen eller, at St. Vincen Fritz, Rose Vester, at St. Vincent's, Athia 1222 Rooseveit.

t's.

20, of 1807 8 ware; Nellie ave, 18, of

bis £570 ER

age. Ee Hilpert, 75, at. City, arterio- |

IN INDIANAPOLIS

Rosa Strack, 86, at 406 N. DeQuincy, chronic myocarditis. Augusta Mering, 81, at’ 1314 N. Alabama, gastro enteritis. Cyrus M. Wilson, ih at 2408 Pierson, cardio Yasculgs renal. yi il E. Rains,i4 illiam Henry House, 63, at 937. Roache, Witham 3 occlusion. { Minnie Ferguson, 67, at 1905 N. Talbott, !

carcino Raymond Butler, 59, at Lo ulcers. Elvira Hunter, 45, at 729 Ogden, hemorrha

, gastric +

cerebra’

eros Nora A. Reddington, 70, at 5145 Broadway, bowel obstruction. Sarah’ at City, hemorrhage. Stephen Monroe Garrett, 76, ai 634 Pierson, empye! Betty Greer; "8h, at 912 E. 13th, myocarditis. Unity cardio vascular renal. Ralph H. Edgerton, 55, at 5603 N. Meridian, coronary occlusion. ar Lewis Mattox, 39, at Long,

ocarditis. Julious PF. Schultz, 77, at 915 N. Oxford,

cerebral hemorrhage. OFFICIAL WEATHER U.S. Weather Bureas

All Data in Central War Time 5:19 | Sunset

TEMPERATURE —May 20, 1942— sos ane 2|2p m

llard, X

cerebral

chronic

en-

7a m

Precipitation 24 hrs. end. 7:30 a. Total prscipiiation Sines Jan. Excess

The following table shows the. temperature irr other cities:

oom LI :

IB | SIIIRZRLBI4]

SEE SEE GER GER GUNR GEES GRED TEND GREEN GRIM GENE IAN GENS GRER GWE WES owen Gee we A

Bere “eity) Kansas or Me. hans

7, at Veterans, carcinoma.

B. Lutz, 72, at 1325 8. Sheffield, |

the Japanese strong point is cen-

in the hotel room crying for bread.

stationary gypsies’ So there it was and all we.needed now was a job.” The history of O'Shea is long and full of laughs. In addition to sodajerk and bricklayer, he has been a licensed seaman, a bellhop at the Ambassador hotel, New York, a bodyguard to a Chinese nationalist, a private detective, a burlesque comedian and an actor, both in ra-

‘dio arid on the stage.

He lives in. a modest Spanishstyle bungalow in Heliywood which he says looks like the interior of a set. It's unreal to him. The sun shining every day, the wife and kids eating regularly, no more bricklaying in order to get out of town, as once happened when the show folded in Mobile, Ala. He's had a wonderful time out there and some pneumonia. There’s a lot of .Jimmy Cagney and a touch of John Garfield and

Mickey Rooney in‘ this guy, but ‘mostly it’s O'Shea. It's a good name

and he’ll make it for himself.

. | strong point on Fish-hook Ridge,

Pin Jap Defenders to Area West-Southwest «of Chichagof.

WASHINGTON, May 29 (U.P.).— U. S. army troops in bitter mountain fighting have completed the|. conquest of Fish-hook Ridge on Attu island. The major center of the Japanese resistance is now confined to a small area west and southwest of" Chichagof harbor, the navy announced | today. The capture of the Japanese

which is 1% miles southwest of Attu village, makes it possible for our troops to move northward against the present Japanese center of resistance. Terrain Is Rugged

The army troops had to fight over rugged, snow-covered terrain and scale 60 degree ridges in the face of heavy enemy fire. The Japanese fought from trenches that were above the cloud line, the navy reported. At the present time, the navy said,

tered in an area formed between the north wall ‘of Chichagof valley, Holtz bay pass and Chichagof harbor. This area, it was explained, is to the west and southwest of Chichagof harbor. This was the first time that the Japanese have been announced as located in that specific area and indicated that the enemy forces had been further compressed.

BILLINGS PATIENTS WILL BE GUESTS

Convalescent soldiers from Billings hospital will be special guests at memorial services and noonday dinner tomorrow at the Corinthian ! Baptist church. The Rev. David C. Venerable, pastor. will preside at the service at 11 a. m. followed by others at 3 and 7 p. m., all commemorating the church’s sixth annual Man's day. In addition to the convalescent sol-| diers, who have seen service in all

the .armed forces are invited.

Corinthian choir, the Kinghan’s Glee club and the Corinthian Men's chorus. Clarence E. Benadum of, Muncie will speak in the aftérnoon. Mrs. Mary Southern is entertainment chairman.

YANKS CONQUER RIDGE ON ATTU

.P.) —Draft Board No. 3 here and

FBI Finds Subjec Already in Army

SOUTH, BEND, Ind., May 29 (U,

the Federal Bureau of Investiga= tion were doubtful whether they would ever find Raymond E. Le= Febvre, South Bend, under ine dictment for failing to notify the board of his change of address. They found him yesterday—in the army. He had even been pro moted within a few months from

a private to a staff sergeant. FBI agents said LeFebvre had’ moved from South Bend and mistakenly registered with a Boston, Mass. draft board. His order number was lower

. there, so he was called before

his South Bend number came up. U. 8S. District Attorney James’

Keating said the case would be nk

dismissed.

POLICE ACCUSED

OF ROUGHNESS -

Grand Jury to Hear Latest :

Blue Complaint Against Department.

.

The feud between the Indianapo=

lis police department and the office

of Prosecutor Sherwood Blue cone 3

tinues.

Police yesterday arrested Mrs,

Julia Belle Whiteside, 51, of 528 W, |

Morris st, following an alleged neighborhood argument. She charged. unnecessary roughe ness by arresting officers. The proses...

cutor’s office will take up the mate % J i

ter with the grand jury.

She was charged by police with :

disorderly conduct. assault and bate tery and resisting an officer. The arrest was the outgrowth of - reports that Mrs. Whiteside and

Floyd Mousness, 524 W. Morris st,

were tossing rocks at each other.. Mousness also was arrested and

charged with assault and battery, «

Both are free on bond pending & . Municipal court hearing June 29. Mrs. Whiteside told prosecutor's

investigators that Patrolman Time othy O’Neill dragged her to the pas ° parts of the world, all members of | 4, wagon, struck her on the side

of the head, causing her head to

and then placed has her chest and pulle months-old grandson f He said that Mrs.

struck him with a telephone ree

ceiver.

STRAUSS

Entire contents copyrighted, 1943, IL. Strauss & Co.,

Ire.

Vol. 1—No. 46

Dear Fellows— THINGS AROUND

who

busy

and II . .

closed. ,

normal once. more following all the excitement over the high water. we've had several days of . fairly warm weather without rain, . « . That's made everyone happy. . . gardeners are busy hoeing weeds. .

damaged by water are:

Today is poppy day. 4 . . The Legion auxiliary and the V. F. W. are selling the crimson flowers on the streets to raise funds for rehabilitating veterans of world wars I . Memorial day will be observed Monday with the stores and banks remaining . War industries will work as

Saturday

Garrett ability. here are back to

fell and . And the city . Victory

. Those Sse Crops were

resowing. . .

have b

usual, and the kids will have to go to school.

It’s no holiday

mile speedway race. . second Memorial day in races,

5

I wR

49-4 (1534 College) and

the old book, he .pulled the “missing” . book out of his pocktt and started reading the number. . . . . The number of

last year for suggestions production.

‘Coral’ Gables, Fla. .

so»

.Conspicuous by its absence will be the 500-

My How He Blushed—

A FELLOW WHO said he'd lost His gasoline rationing A book called at Board

. Asked if he had the serial number of

Then he blushed and beat it.

starting - to catch up with the ‘boy babies. . Some folks interpret that as a sign the wel ant going to last forever. men are delivering unpleasant "reminders that the quarterly income tax payments for the second quarter are due by June 15. The Allison plant has paid its workers here. $21,533 in war bonds and stamps in. the

irl aw ! ‘ Names Make News— “BISHOP EDGAR BLAKE, once head of * the Indianapolis Methodist’ area, ‘died at

_ 18 the new pathologist ab Methodist. hospital. ~ .. . Supreme Court Judge H. Nathan Swaim has moved up to the post of chief justice. - And Judge Wilbur Royse became using Jue of Se appeal out

for them.

creases

. This will be the ati hous

a row without the

ladder broke. . .

accounts board 14 years. . House association re-elected J. P. Frenzel Jr., president, machinist for the New York Central 15.yeafs, has retired. . Grove shops since 1908. . . the new president of the Butler studeng council. .

May 29, 1943 _

A. Crume, because of physical dise

dislocated his shoulder, . . . The

OCD. .

Harry :Schellert . Sr.,

. He's been at the Beech . Joe Kettery is

. . Joan Williams is secretary. nr fw

Watch That Smoking—

POLICE HAVE started enforcing the new . ordinance banning smoking on streetcars and busses.

. Several fellows have. bee

een fined. City - council

has granted pay in-

of 5 cents to about 300

street and collection

department em-

ployees.

*

children, of School 32 and Illinois)

bitten applied for another

. Five all . pupils (21st wére by a dog

Wednesday. . ‘None was bitten seriously. . . for July are low in Indiana, while oth

states catch up with their quotas. . . Hoosier state has been meeting its calls e

since the start. . .

Claypool. . officers. . ment will be held June 7 at North Met

girl babies born ‘is church.

. The mail

‘Stewart, day. .

on how to improye the. gas

w they: got:

v

Dr. Lester E. Hoyt

sims

El Lilly plant badge number 1647. . ~ his draft. order “number. y sa ‘or SO ago, ’s Tellow ap) : “driver of an amphibious jeep a ‘be taken to his home in the f . The soldier took him... .

. A new officers’ club hag

. . It’s open to all commissioned iw Butler's 88th annual commend

.-.. Cathedral high school's

graduation was held last Sunday.

w Rr %K

- Funny Things Happen— ' FUNNY THING happened to Mrs. A

310 N. Arlington ave. the | .“She went to the kitchen to 1 stove and nearly went through

ceiling. when something in the w - hissed at: her. ‘possums in the basket. il

. She found two: baby . No telling ho there. -. . . Kenneth Cooke, ¢ & Co.: shipping department,

into. a window of the ) ho! * he said: “Wait :

against

. . . Evan Miller, assistant managee . of the I. A. C., while cleaning his gutters, =

. Ralph S. Hesler has been named director of accounts and auditor for . He's been with the state + | . « The Clearing