Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 8 July 1943 — Page 7
' THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES PAGE 7
BLOCKS DOWNSTAIRS STORE
SATURDAY AT 1:00 TUESDAYS Through FRIDAY Store Hours —9:45 to 5:15. MONDAYS—I12:15 to 8:45
00 TGA oe
We Still Have Those Cool BEVERLY ace-woor TROPICAL: WORSTED SUITS
These are suits of superior tailoring BECAUSE . . . these fine all wool fab-
THURSDAY, JULY & 1043
(REPORTS RIOTS | IN COPENHAGEN
Swedish Sources Say Allies . Drop Saboteurs by | : : Parachute. FI | 5 wy ou A rag Se : ,
Atterbury Wins Praise
BLOCK’S CLOSES
an]
Maj. Gen. Allen W. Gullion, provost marshal general of the U. S. army, spent yesterday at Camp Atterbury inspecting the internment camp for Italians taken prisoners of war. Shown (left to right) are Gen. Gullion, Col. Welton M. Modisette, post commander; Col. John L. Gammell, internment camp commander, and Maj. Ben H. Powell, Gen. Gullion’s aid.
WRINKLE RESISTING SHAPE RETAINING
Single and double breasteds —many with pleated slacks, all zippered.
belligerents on both sides accord to
Ask Records for
ple, understanding these facts, will appreciate the reasons why prisoners in our hands are being treated kindly, though firmly, and that the Kindness in no way indicates weak-
Tans, grays, browns, blues and teal blues.
rics handle like any regular weight cloth! They're COOLER, BECAUSE the cloth
is porous . . . woven with thousands of
little windows to let the body heat out! ENJOY THE AIR-CONDITIONED COMFORT of an ALL WOOL TROPICAL WORSTED . .. it's the best kind
of summer suit we know of!
Stripes, hairline stripes, solid shades.
Regulars, shorts, longs, stouts, short stouts and long stouts.
All Wool Gabardine Slacks
Rich cocoa browns and tans to wear with ‘sports jackets for extra wardrobe variety! These slacks fit evenly across the hips eliminating that slouchy look so many slacks give! Sizes for men and young men,
Tailored of fine fabrics by a fine maker! Colors are light gray, dark gray and tan corded stripes in sizes up to 50 waist. Every pair sanforized-shrunk!
Thiz sing is the newest style creation for 1943 ! . . and jt is on display at Rays. For over 29 years Kays have been first to show the very latest in ring. design. Strlecr
STOCKHOLM, July 8 (U. P.).— 1 An outbreak that may have reached | rot proportions occurred Tuesday! In city hall square at Copenhagen, ! Danish reports said today as Swed- | ish newspaper dispatches asserted that British-trained saboteurs were | 5 »mpperating in Denmark. | The Danish censor suppressed de- | = tails of the Copenhagen unrest but {t was indicated that large crowds and the police were involved and that the demonstration spread beyond the square into nearby streets. Four persons were said to have been injured in the “episodes.” The Stockholm newspaper Afton- | tidningen said that most of Denmark's sabotage against the Ger- » fnans was being carried out by . J young Danes trained in England A ; 11 f Pp "and landed in the homeland by| XIS req ng risoners parachute, . More than 100 Danes were said F / > | R f to be in prison at Copenhagen air Yi enerq epor S awaiting trial for sabotage, which | #he Germans characterized as minor| Neutrals in Switzerland report prisoners equally good treatment. despite the fact that objectives usu- | that Germany and Italy are con-| “It might seem very reasonable ally are well chosen, the newspaper | forming to the 1829 Geneva treaty not to permit the prisoners of war said. {governing treatment of prisoners of in our hands to have the full army Meanwhile, Danish circles here! War, Maj. Gen. Allen W. Gullion [ration when hard-working civilians reported receipt of inforination that Provost marshal general of the U. S./in the immediate vicinity, under the Germans are fortifying not only army, said at Camp Atterbury. the point system, have less,” GulJutland, on the west, but the Zea-| Inspecting the camp for Italian lion said. land east coast opposite Sweden. |Drisoners of war there yesterday, | “But the treaty requires that prisThis led to speculation on whether | Gen. Guillion complimented Lt. Col. joners be given the same rations the fortifications were meant to pro- {John L. Gammell, internment camp | that our soldiers enjoy. Should we tect the Nazi-occupied country|commander, on the condition of deviate from that treaty requirefrom invasion by Sweden or a pre- | buildings and grounds and on the | ment, the enemy would immediately caution against a landing on the | treatment given the prisoners. iretaliate and our boys would be German Baltic coast. The general, whose jurisdiction | given ersatz food and very little of covers prisoners of war, said that | that. COPPER ROAD MEN the Geneva treaty requires that{ "I know that the American peoWON'T END STRIKE TAGNA, Utah, July 8 (U. P).— Soldiers Abroad ness or sentimentality,” the genA small group of hard-bi il- eral said. d wi hy p of hard-bitten on “THE MUSIC GOES round and | sm —————— road workmen rejected the army's a-round. Whoa-ho-ho-ho-ho and request that they return to work| it comes up here” | today and continued a strike which| Push that middle valve down has halted production of 27 per| and make the music come out for LAW IS INVALID ba : listening Yankees on foreign soil! ent of the nat s : Ww OF Dihipn's Sonp-s ue. The appeal comes from the 11th | Atty. Gen. James Emmert today Vhile a 50-car train of war-vital| gistrict American Legion. It's |held invalid the 1043 law which ore stood on a side track waiting] pushing a drive to collect at least | raised the age limit of tuberculosis {to be unloaded at the smelter, 57 150,000 “Records for Fighting sanatorium patients, whose educaconductors and brakemen voteq| Men.” . tion costs must be paid by the state, down the army's request . The records, cracked, broken, {from 18 to 30. Y® Seuss . even in halves, will be reprocessed The new law was held invalid The men are employed on trains| gnd new recordings made for ship- [because it did not contain an that haul ore from the Utah Copper| ment abroad. amendatory reference in the act itCo's Bingham mine to the] Radios are not permitted over- self to a 1941 law which it amended. ginelters. Their strike, which began| seas. Records are needed to buoy In another opinion, Mr. Emmert Tuesday night has halted produc-| the morale of men in uniform. held that nursing schools in the | tion of 2,000,000 pounds of ore per| Take old records to a fire sta- [state can participate in the federal | day. tion, or call a Legionnaire or a nurses’ training program and ob- | MM The strikers said they would not{ Boy Scout. Take them to a li- ftain federal grants provided by the return until the copper company| brary branch, or the factory | Bolton bill. rescinds an order classifying them| where you work and drop them He said, however, that the Indi-| SLACKS es employees of the mine instead| in a container which will be [ana nurses’ board could not grant | of the Bingham Garfield railroad. | provided. state certificates to nurses who have | Sanforized Both the railroad and the copper Help the Legion keep ‘em | completed the federal training un- Shrunk . mine are subsidiaries of the Kenne-| singing-listening to good old home- [ ti) they have been honorably dis- For Men cott Copper Co. spun Yankee melodies. | charged from the armed service. y Shirt and Pants | “Multicord” Washable Slacks Blue! Tan! a 3 Es Green! i ) 05 WHITE DUCK ; Sanforized Shrunk - For Men
styles for over o quarter of @
OO A En
Special July Sale!
MEN'S 1.19 and 1.50
AFTER THE GAME—OR AFTER A SWIM SLIP INTO
TERRY KNIT COATS, PULL-OVERS 1.29
® Cotton and lastex suits! ® Rayon and lastex suits!
® With built-in support! THE
® Some with belts and kots of fellows have already found out how very = PULL.OVERS pockets! useful one of these coats can be! Grand protection after a strenuous game . . . abtorbing excess ® Royal! Navy! Wine! moisture after a swim! In small, medium and large THE ’ Maes for men and young Sass in pastel blue, green or tan stripes! For men | men!
young men! COATS
