Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 28 July 1943 — Page 3
WEDNESDAY, JULY 2
Don't Attemp
WASHINGTON, July 28.—Wi and urging them to use discretion
the paper sacks don’t hold the flay “For that reason, it can’t be
cool place, preferably the ice box.”
= x » Stretching Elastic A synthetic elastic thread, now in mass production, has been adopted for use in waistbands of excise uniforms, and underwear issued to women members of the marine corps. This new elastic yarn had previously been used for the same purpose by the WAC,
® » Helping the Axis In a drive against home soap making, WPB conservation experts point out that our armies are utterly dependent upon the steady flow of munitions, which in turn depends on the production of glycerine from salvaged waste
Wartime Living
Coffee For It Won't Keep
By BETTY MacDONALD
Times Special Writer the ration lists, OPA is cautioning housewives against hoarding,
“Coffee isn't put up in vacuum packs any more these days, and
You should buy sparingly and keep in tightly closed containers in a
8, 1043
t to Hoard
th coffee slated to be marked off in purchasing for their own good.
or,” one official in OPA explained. kept as long as pre-war blends.
RAISE P
Here's Fable of New Values
FRUITS, BEANS, * CORN INCLUDED
Changes Effective Aug. 1:
| Overlap Period on Blue Stamps Extended.
WASHINGTON, July 28 (U. P.) — (Point values of seven frozen prod- Beans, lima (all varieties) (over 8 oz. incl. 12 oz.) ...
|ucts—fruits, berries, green beans, lima beans, cut corn, peas and | spinach—will be raised three points ‘per pound beginning Aug. 1, the ‘office of price administration an- { nounced last night. Tomato juice in cans of 14 ounces and over will be raised approximately one point per pound. Point values of frozen fruit juices, which have not been moving to consumers in substantial quantities, ‘are to be cut from one-third to one-half.
Overlap More Flexible
{
OPA also announced that the validity of blue stamps “R,” “S" and
| | |
Canned or Bo
Beans, all varieties (baked beans. si
and peas, pork and beans, kidney beans, lentils,
etc.) (over 1 1b. 2 oz. incl. 1 1b. Tomato juice (over 14 oz. incl. 1 lb. |
Frozen
i Strawberries or peaches (over 12 oz.
| All other fruits and berries (over 12 oz. incl. 16 oz.) .. {All fruit juices (over 12 oa. incl. 16 oz.) .
| Beans, green (all styles) (over 8 oz.
Corn, cut (over 8 cz. incl. 12 oz.) .. {Peas (over 8 oz. incl. 12 oz) {Spinach (over 8 oz. incl. i2 oz.) (Effective
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
OINTS FOR 7 FROZEN ITEMS
PAGE 3
ttled Point Value
New Old Change
oaked dry beans
+1 +1
13 3
14 3
6 oz.) . 308) ......
|
Point Value New Old Change incl. 16 oz.) . +3 +3 -2 +2 +2 +2 “+2
incl. 12 oz.) .
. +2 Aug. 1) {
WAC Swears in Sister
|
CORN AT $1.11 CAN'T BE FOUND
Farmers Hold for Higher Price; Action on Ceiling Waiver Awaited.
By DAN GORDON
Despite reports to the contrary, local grain and stock men are agreed on one thing: there isn't a bushel of corn to be bought on the open market at the OPA ceiling price of $1.11%. Still unanswered, too, is last week's appeal by operators of the Indianapolis stockyards for a corn ceiling price waiver by the OPA so that
they might buy grain for feeding |™
the hogs brought to market. | According to Harvey Melvin, vice | president of the Belt Railroad and Stock Yards Co., the farmers are still holding on to the corn because they feel that congress, after the present recess, will raise the ceiling |
rm Here
TE
aN:
Joins Fi
J. Howard Wendorph, formerly of Birmingham, Mich., is now associated with the Washington Park cemetery here. He is a member of the American Legion and a past grand officer of the Knights of Pythias in Michigan.
to about $1.35 a bushel, the price realized for the grain when a live porker is sold at the market,
PLAN DRIVE ON TAVERN SALES
‘Crackdown’ on Selling to Minors Mapped by Prosecutors.
A state-wide ‘crackdown’ proe gram against taverns selling liquors to minors has been adopted jointly by the Indiana Association of Prose= cuting Attorneys and the State Ale
coholic Beverage Commission, Discussing wartime law enforcee ment problems, the prosecutors, holding their annual convention at the Claypool hotel, complained that the sale of liquors to 'teen age boys and girls was one of the major face tors in the rising juvenile deline quency. Informed in advance that the | prosecutors had a complaint to make against the liquor traffic, Neil McCallum, member of the alcoholie ‘beverage commission, appeared at the meeting and promised that his | commission would revoke licenses
farts. Home soap making operates against the cause by taking waste fats out of the government’s fat salvage campaigh, and decreasing the manufacture of commercial soap which is the largest single source of the nation's glycerine supply.
Odds 'n' Ends
CT” will extend from Aug. 1 through Sept. 20. The overlap period in the past has been for one week after the first of the month. Officials said the longer period wiil add more ‘flexibility to the system, and will THE BUREAU of Agricultural Economics reports an increase permit housewives more time for of about 66 per cent in the amount of milled peanuts produced | 'orderly budgeting of their stamps. during the 1942-43 season. , . . Prospects of obtaining adequate sup- | The new table showed that canned plies of chemicals for acetate and viscose rayon production is or bottled baked beans, kidney being discussed with industry representatives and WPB in Wash- ‘beans. lentils and other varieties of ington. Manufacturers of groundwood paperboard food dishes were canned dry beans figure in a genprovided with specific dollars and cents ceiling by OPA. eral realignment of point values as lapplied to certain container sizes.
| Some Raised, Some Cut
For example, OPA pointed out that the point value of these beans ‘in the weight bracket from one pound and two ounces through one pound and six ounces is raised from (14 to 15. But the next weight ‘bracket, over one pound six ounces, including two pounds, the ration is,
House Blocked $1.40
A few days before the recess the senate approved the raising of the ceiling to as much as $1.40 a bushel, but the house refused to concur after War Food Administrator
» x » "
Your Health in Wartime Penicillin Proves Valuable Aid in Treating Infections
By DR. THOMAS D. MASTERS
(Continued from Page One)
with, and further interested several manufacturers in producing the drug. Through the competitive efforts of the latter, a number of improvements in purifying and producing the drug took place. When the United States entered | the war in December of 1941, the government took immediate con. | trol of the supplies and production ' of penicillin to date, and advised ! its committee on medical research to distribute the drug care- | | fully for medical investigation. | The details of this investigation | are still a secret. but it is obvious
Times Special WASHINGTON, July 28.—Having
Are the Yanks In Philippines?
LONDON, July 28 (U. P.).— Radio Berlin today broadcast a Japanese communique describing bitter fighting between American troops and the Japanese occupation forces on Mindanao island, southernmost of the Philippines, Exchange Telegraph reported. The Japanese communique said the greater part of the American forces had been wiped out but that mopping up operations still were in progress. Tokyo previously has broadcast reports of activity in the Philippines against still-resisting groups of troops.
Dr. Masters
Combatting Disease
They said the injections can be (a preventative if started about 14 , Weeks before the persons usually is afflicted, but this year the season started too far ahead of time.
Promises Co-operation Some of the prosecutors charged | that beverage commission agents never called on them about law ' violations in taverns and that some Dead in U. S. Because of War, He Says in Urging Food Administrator Chester G. Collaboration. | Frank E. Coughlin, deputy Ine Davis, on April 14 had promised . ‘diana attorney general, promised that the present ceilings would not| WASHINGTON, July 28 (U. Phat his office would back up the be lifted until the end of the cur- Rep. Charles A. Eaton of New Jer- beverage commission and prose= rent crop year. The Indianapolis world collaborationists. la warning . . . they will lose their WAC Lt. Barbara Rode, Evanston, Ill, swears in her younger st siilugs Yo oe Jolt the His declaration was made at a licenses, instead,” Mr. Coughlin said. sister, Nancy, thereby presenting a united Rode front against the [NO breaking of the jam Is in sight. | ) i OLIRSS | Headlining the convention speaks -~ ; : Rl ant | ‘Much of the Indiana Dog stpply|tilie When inal issue surpassed y Dine program today were to be Ate is diverted from such major trading [others in Republican party councils. | ints as Indianapolis, Ft. Wayne, 4 " ray department. ! ; away by the present war, and all i ’ rr id Tt ledger. wars are reputed jcanned goods may be sold. These | RITES TOMORROW Blame That W qr throughout the state. that it now needs is a decent burial,” | _—— on he ageany. no: ie Rr oy a foods are assigned a Value of eight Porkers Sent East ‘he said. to accelerate inventions. Few inv : . % ; ints t, four Wolni | : Lag : DEWEY AND WILLKIE can be carried over into times of peace. In medicine, war retards the Nouns. Un] NE Rh un William P. Strawmyer, 76, In-| Most of the porkers brought oly aS rps. 3 be Seve o progress of new ideas, I ig oes : ks cessed foods rationing program. dianapolis harness maker and Indiana Sulever would have to fojune pong, Where vey ale Sold bY | strawman within the Republican IN 4 ACE-L A FOLLETTE ™ v5 1 » 1 hy “Xr » » > > ! Vv s . » ! \ \ ; . ; ” provide an elaborate laboratory Officials said that this is approxi- leather dealer for the past 50 years, | 0 some northern state, because Wei OSE pares al ie barns |Party just to tear it apart again. | Enormous in- the Indiana university medical act, and which results in most of even tacit, step in Slip direction of york state where he called on both terest has been chanan mortuary, with burial in'school said there is no experimental the “black marketing” in pork Post-war internationalism, Governor Thomas H. Dewey and stimulated | {Crown Hill cemetery, {work now going on and that it is!products. Internationalism Urged Wendell L. Willkie, Rep. Charles by the discov- With his brother, John Albert difficult to find a point of attack.| It has been reported that the The obportunily was bpresenteglll D° Folletie (B. Ind) today ex ery of the drug ;Strawmyer, he owned the Straw-|{ So if the sniffiers can't get R¥ay Wak food administration has guar- Pp y p [pressed the opinion that “both are ampie of how | With offices on the Monument circle. made from the particular type of |to the government through the wary Hien —- 8 Soup Seticated to eat jand “the most popular candidate war may affect { Mr. Strawmyer was a member of |pollen which affects different production hoard which will then | N8 x16 party away fom 1solation- | the Republicans could nominate.” - medicine. that penicillin as a discovery’ is | [the Oriental Masonic lodge, the persons. allocate the grain to the various 1ST 8S a De Boliey oh. } | He will leave for Evansville to= at least as important as the sul- | |Scottish Rite, the Murat Temple! At Billings General hospital at Ft. starch plants throughout the he policy group, which has no morrow and next Tuesday will ad" Isolcated In 1940 | fonamides. | land K. of P. lodge 56. He was born | Harrison ri fever is current | country. {Official standing In the party, urged dress the Rotary club there on In 1929, Prof. Fleming in | i ‘ : | Wayne; g, sister, Mrs, Luella Butler; Season's Here Early 'bushels in 96 Midwestern elevators [gression and co-operate in the jts “lack of streamlined tools,” he bacteria. | USed asa Me diteases {his brother, and four grandchildren {on June 25. Close to 885,000 bushels | Peaceful solution of world problenis.” said. Efforts to isolate this substance | that the sulfonamides combat— | : | were bought at three elevators here| After a two-hour conference,| Mrs. La Follette will accompany in bure form were not satisface | with several additional ad- : ! M Indianapolis Deneen A. Watson, chairman of the (the congressman to Sandusky, O., got: the problem was put | vantages. | ‘ASKS IF MUSSOLINI : policy association, said Spangler |where she will visit Col. and Mrs. Ys ne : | It can be used at any stage of 1S IN SOUTH IRELAND Corn Allocated Slowly clinical experimentation on cases that had not yielded to the sulfonamides, and found a most astonishing response among them to the substance. Unfortunately.
! in the presence of pus, where the
sulfonamides are powerless. In meningitis, it can be injected directly into the spinal fluid. Above all, it is effective against a wider variety of bacteria than the sulfonamides, and will therefore be
SHAKEUP LOOMING OVER OWI PROGRAM
LONDON, July 28 ((U. P.).—The whereabouts of Mussolini became a matter of speculation in commons today. “Can you say whether Mussolini
is in the south of Ireland or noi?” Oliver Locker-Lampson asked Prime
+ Morgan,
To relieve the intensity of suffering in the city, Dr. Herman G., health board secretary,
urged citizens to cut down the
weeds, even pull them out by the
roots. But again the war—because of the manpower shortage it is difficult to
Indiana Grain Co-Op most of the] grain in the local elevators has no
t When it meets in September.
Wis.
vet been moved by the government. The corn now is being allocated slowly to those starch plants known as “wet processors,” who make products essential to the war effort. Some industrial starch is going to
STRAUSS
REP, EATON HITS of liquor dealers caught selling to minors. Marvin Jones testified that some county liquor boards refused to pros corn is reaching markets under the ceed against tavern operators after present ceiling. [the prosecutors had obtained evie The government, through former | dence of sales to minors. 1 d that f sey, ranking Republican member of |cutors in the drive to “crack down” top is set at $1.11 an at for , lon the taverns. ; he house foreign affairs committee, | Chicago is $1.07 a bushel. she ous f0reig : ..| “In the future a tavern operator Mr. Melvin said that the farm- today joined the ranks of POSt-Wal'| i) 10 be let off with a fine and ers continue to have a “wait and axis which forced them to flee Europe where their father was manager for International Harvester Co. hu ; _'|torney General James A. Emmert, Sn - ‘poi : / “Isolationism is dead in America pon F. Stiver, state police superine ak lowered from 21 points to 18. | 2 iLafayette, Muncie and Evansville, | pecause the rational grounds upon | tendent, and Robert Borkenstein, Another powerful bactericide to emerge from world war aL nial | The table lists for the first time! W, P, STRAWMYER Sneezes: You Can at some 40 to 50 yall Socom which it was based have been swept chief technician of the state police progress is Penicillin, which takes its place alongside the sulfonamides 'the point value at which home- | ‘tion points and 5 sales arns as a deadly enemy of infection and disease. to test out ideas previously de- ; oy: : es : there's every kind of pollen here. packers. : v B. veloped and te Ra jInsiely onesnall of the average POI died Just night at the Methodist | Do 'are sold by the head, a practice] Eaton's statement was issued | op value of commercially packed foods : we Hard to Atiack lqitad ; ers. shortly after Republican national hasten their & and does not represent a point hosiptal after a brief illness. | { Which, according lo sore i i 1 shied cl f | maturity. F | change “| Funeral services will be held at! Doctors on the research staff at!is contrary to the state licensing Officials shied clear of an open, or ci returned from a visit in New > 2 p. m. tomorrow at Flanner & BuPencillin (pro- myer Bros. leather company at 328! from their weed enemy in time, | anteed farmers the difference be. fase Jeena? iio Repuriican Ne- [runing for president as hard as nounced peni- |W. Washington st. Before John they'll have to suffer and take the |tween the present ceiling price and | ol 8 WE Ws ‘ho | they can.” sillin), which _ (Strawmyer joined the firm, the |treatments which medical experts | the new one (if put into effect by &% Ra or IS he socia. |. The Evansville congressman fas | provides an ex- jcompany was Strawmyer & Nilius, agree upon—injections of solutions |Oct. 31) when they sell their corn |fepublican post=war policy assocla-{yors Mr. Willkie as a fellow-Hoosier {in Royalton, Ind. | problem. A clinic is operated there| These plants were facing a seri- {Senier Sho bulier Paty pager 0| “What's the Matter With Congress.” London recognized that a sub- | " | Survivors include the widow, | to help sufferers. Doctors said about [ous shortage of corn the latter part | SPT the adoption of a foreign Mr. La Follette expects to point stance produced by a fungus | W ith the matter of under-pro- {Carrie Coons Strawmyer; a daugh-|50 soldiers are being given treat. of June when the government req- policy aimed at the creation of a out that congress cannot function called Penicillum notatum ex- | duction no longer a hindrance to | {ter, Mrs. Gerald L. Pence Ft | ments | nisttioned approximately 15,000,000 world organization to restrain ag-!any better than it does because of erted an unfavorable effect on | civilian use, penicillin will be | ’ . : ol Ss. | : ! as 'agreed only that such a proposal Andrew Babens, formerly of Evanse aside until 1940, when a group of | } e a agy y t pos : bens, x) workers at Oxford university suc- the progress of a disease, not just | According to R. B. Wilson of the jwould be considered by the national ville. Their daughter, Marion, 15, ceeded in isolating the drug. at the beginning. It can be used ‘committee's post-war advisory group will go to a camp at Elkhart Lake, These scientists also did some the supply of penicillin remained ' too small even for the smallscale experimentation undertaken at this time.
SAYS: IT'S ONE DAY NEARER VICTORY
a commoner way to fight them all. | (Continued from Page One) |
It has already been found. however, that as with the sulfonamides, bacteria may become resistant to penicillin. but resistance to the one drug does not carry { over to the other, so that two
! Minister Churchill.
hire anyone to do that and a lot | England via lend-lease. office where the broadcasts origi- You seem to know.” broke
: in of hard-working people say they| Starch has many by-products and nated defended them and declared Laborite James Griffiths amid gen- don’t have time to do it on their js used in the manufacture of such that the OWI itself did not call the eral laughter. : {own property. | diverse items as adhesive tape, bakking a moron and Badoglio Rr g estan| ing powder and stearine. Firms like ! fascist, but had quoted a newspaper! Ey : the Piel Bros. Co. division of the | powerful bactericides will be at |columnist. pe {Brenden Bracken, Locker-Lampson| GIRL LOSES F INGERS | National Starch Products, Inc. of the disposal of the physician | The broadcasts in question were |282ID arose and inquired: ‘BY EXPLODING SHELL | Indianapolis, have a preferred ratafter the war. ‘sent over short-wave stations which ' ing on the CCC's allocation list for
“Is there any truth in the State’ |OWI calls the “Voice of America.” | ment Signor Mussolini is now in| MISHAWAKA, Ind, July 2 (U.!this requisitioned corn. P).—The explosion of a smalll Herhert C. Piel, Indianapolis
\ {the south of Ireland?” In presenting unofficial American! nh ; . R A Tl O N | N G D A TES reaction to events in Italy, OWI pi 2 dudes his Ume| caliber shell was blamed today for| manager of the firm, says that the quoted an imaginary American po-| . the loss of three fingers and a|iequjsition has definitely eased the Canned Goods litical commentator, “John Durfee.” | thumb and possible loss of the sight | tiation insofar as the immediate It also quoted a Sunday-night radio laid down by OWI following the | in one eye of an 11-year -old Misha- present is concerned. Blue stamps N, P and Q good speech of Newspaper Columnist ouster of Benito Mussolini and as|waka girl, Ruth Smith. through Aug. 7. Samuel Grafton, who described the described by Eisenhower, Steve Molnar, St. Joseph county| .. a : : King as moronic. | OWI officials were puzzled why | sheriff, said the girl apparently held NAZIS SPURN ITALIAN PLEA Meat (Grafton issued the following the state department had not been 2 match to the cartridge, which he | STOCKHOLM, July 28 (U. P.. Red stamps P, Q R statement in New York said she found in the street, and its | —The Nazi-controlled Scandinavian good through Saturday. T is good through Aug.
on the consulted for guidance immediately : | president's comment: “The phrase after the Rome announcement— explosion caused wounds that|telegraph bureau reported from the amputation of {Bern today that the Germans have comes valid Sunday; V W, Aug. 15. All expire
| ‘moronic little king’ seems to me a Ordinarily a routine step to meet necessitated rather temperate reference to the sudden turns in international three fingers and the thumb of her refused an Italian request to withShoes . : Gasoline Stamp 18 good for Stamp 7 in A book is good. {land and America may accept the | Badoglio government, I can only | yJeseph, at 214 Conoraia. These lists are trem official records im Alvin, Enna Ruble, at 654 N. Tue! the county court house. The Times, through Aug. 15. ‘cial vehicles every six months or scribed the broadcasts as “an out 3 Applications may be made now 5000 miles, whichever is first. and out boner,” said it was “an or- . 18%} o mum allotment of 23 pounds per one coupons for 1943-44 scason aie person who actually prepared the person which includes five pounds good until Jan. 4. script because the broadcasts were | pbeeding divine | Draken driving b OFFICIAL WEATHER | An ethers i on » | TEMPERATURE hotel, noon : Holland's most them—about 60.000 words, I guess.”! —July 28, 1942— tna : Delhartog, one of | “Hollands Glory,” a story of! Cosmonsiitan Deficiency since Jan. 1 1.11 Riven club, luncheon meeting, Columbia: | ciup, noon. -s in his mind, mem- March, 1943. i ih oth ities: and two plays “The book caused a great battie| in other cities gh tow 60 Cleveland which has become the symbol of riots snd sentenced me to death.” | Denver Holland's resistance, played hide ee A——— IFt. Wayne {Inaianapoilis (City) death, He escaped, disguised as an ,,. ojven by Paul Whiteside at a New Nor aa two plays while in hiding” he fense, at 8 p. m. Friday in the Gar-{an Suionio. Tex. ooo 00 explained, “and then I knew I could ‘field park open air theater.
Government Takes Control
The United States Department of Agriculture got interested in the problem that the English sci- | entists had so long been wrestling |
{ | |
1for jellies, jams, preserves, etc. Stamps 15 and 16 are each good for | five pounas through Oct. 31. As fruit ripens, application mey be ! made at local boards for additional ailotments up to 15 pounds per per-
and S are sen if needed.
Red stamp, 31. U, be-| Aug. 8, and! Aug. 31. !
Now Look!
A BRUXTON WHITE BROADCLOTH SHIRT!
It has a SHAPED BODY for looks and comfort!
It has NATURAL SHOULDERS for better fit!
It has a WRINKLE FREE COLLAR— it stays neat in blistering heat— no poetry intended—and yet requires no starch!
Coffee
Stamp 22 is good for one pound through Aug. 11.
one pair | |
i i
City Tel 32
Boys Carl, Alene Hall, at St. Francis. Emmett, Ruby Scott, at St. Francis. William, Lillie Mullinex, at City. W. F., Teresa Blievernicht, at St.
Whit B. Batey, 25, U. 8. army. Columbus, l O.. Anne R. Deeb, 25, of 1315 N. Dearborn. W ! Max W. Berry, 20. U. 8. army, Santa VinMonica, Cal.; Vivian Adair, 33, of 918 N. Audubon.
$7 Charles E._Sosley, 58, of 1241 Central; ‘{ Alma G. Best, 52, of 5050 E. Walnut. ® Robert D. Conger, 28, U. S. army; Jean A. Guist, 17, of 4923 W. 12th. o Alton Guyton, 34, of 2246 Columbia; Emma 6 E Stevens, 25, of 2246 Columbia. v4!{Barl H. Mitchell, 24, of 1406 King; Carol =~ M. Griffin, 22, of 3911 Ruckle. $233 Robert J. Pein, 24, of 2227 Brookside; Rose . Phelps, 23, of 1422 N. Pennsylvania. Wesley Russell, 25, of 817 Ft. Wayne ave.; Elizabeth Davidson, 18, of 6 W. Ray,
0. 3. Sam 8S. Siiverman, 28 U. 8. army, Cam Claypool ~ Barkeley, Tex.: Dorothy M. Berkowits, 24, of 570 E. Fall Creek bivd. Columbia! Henry T. Simmons, 60, of 1532 N. Arsenal; Blanche Joyner, 46, of 5746 E. Michigan. Robert F. Thomas, 46, U. 8. army, Bard college, New York; Rosemary B. wton, 24, of 4450 Guilford. Boyden T. Walter, 25, U. 8. army, Ft [George F. Harrison; Bonnie R. Shinn, 42, R. R. 2,| chronio myocarditis.
Greencastle, Ind. David White, 23. of 615 E. 11th; Katherine| Tracy Ellen Arthur, 48, at 1233 Reisner, Shaw, 21, of 615 E. lth. carcinoma. oa : William D. . | Fred C. a » ‘eterans, arterio- E Mild scierost . {Gladys A. Phillips, 45, at 1818 Arrow, anor nays 5 a th hy Wi » 8s, City, cardio
red M. Snyder vascular. Cline, B55, at City, cerebral
cents. John, Adeiyn Bohl, at St. Vincent's. Joseph, Helen Enright, at St. Vincent's. Benard, Bridget Gorman, at St. Vincent’s. Blaine, Jean Liljenquist, at St. Vincent's. Gayle, Ella Maysfleld, at Coleman. Merritt, Ollie Beasley, at Methodist, Myron, Florence Cutrell, at Methodist, William, Irving Divin, at Methodist. Charles, Elizabeth Wells, at Methodist, Amil, Elnora Settles, at 2519 Yandes. Frank, Eileen Mitchell, at 608 Lexington. Leon, Mary Mallory, at 625 W. North, Arthur, Lola Bryant, at 1214 8. West, Paul, Clara Kern, at 1308 Zwingley. Lewis, Lorene Hunter, at 1208 S. Emerson.
DEATHS
Beatrice Slinker, 38, at City, toxemia, Fred BE. Grace, 77, at 1220 N. Dearborn, chronic myocarditis. Logue, 92, at 1228 Wright,
Cases Convie- Fines Tried tions Paid | 3 2 $1
Violations in
o
luncheon meeting,
You can buy these shirts at
$
(And they are great buys!)
club, luncheon,
Edgewood
Owners, luncheon, Bamboo room, Hotel Washington, 12:15 p. m. Junior Chamber of Commerce, luncheon. Goig room, Hotel Washington, 12:15 68 : p.m. Indiana Metor Trick association, lunch- { eon, Hotel Antlers, noon. !Y.M.C.A. Camera club, meeting | YMCA, 7:30 p. m. 5 | Yeu! Men's Discussion elub, i ! YM.C.A, 6p m. +} | Co-operative Club of Indianapolis, lunchJ | eon, Columbia club, noon. ‘os |10-Plus club, meeting, Chamber of Commerce, 7:30 p. m.
Rose Haggan, 19, Noblesville, Ind,
BIRTHS Girls
Wolsenberger, St. Franei
Thomas, Norma Daugherty, at Coleman. Leonard, Frances Walter, at Coleman. Irvin, Edith Bauer, at Methodist.
Howard W. Young, 21, U. 8. navy; El at R.
hen Ottaway O. Rolp, 67, at 323 N. Oxford, Otto 73, at City, pneumococcic Ellen Connelly, 74, at St. Vincent's, cere-
dinner,
Jason, Naomi at s.
war on my country, but in view of | (the ominous indications that Eng- IN INDI A N ‘A PO [ IS Sugar MARRIAGE LICENSES h, Margaret Warner, : : | Second Inspection Deadline: A King is smarter than I thought.) FATALITIES Stamp 13 is goed for five POUNCGS pook vehicles by Sept. 30; commer An OWI official here, who de- County Wihtom. gates Montgomery: aoa ies » i» names and ad W. Market. : j one pound of sugar for every four that the blame could not possibly Injured quarts of fruit canned with a maxi- Stamp 5 expires Sept. 30. Period be placed on the shoulders of the hi | through street ! Failure to stop at fore Escaping From Nazi Be ore scaping rom azis (All Data in Central Wartime) | EVENTS TODAY ! Sunrise ..... 3:39 | Sunset. . . 8:08 | LONDON, July 28 (U. P).—Jan!not bring them out, so I memorized ; | Lions club, : tat | Precipitation 24 hrs. ending 7:30 a. m. | District directors, meeting, into London yesterday with a bullet ,, veround, sold 180.00 copies be-| Total precipitation since Jan. 1. 2261| School gymnasium, § p. m. ; i ix new novelettes fore the Germans banned it | . in his leg and six 1 i , ih The following table shows the tempera-; | Apartment The 29-year-old author of the ane» Dehartog said, “and the|Chicago Dutch best seller, “Holland's Glory,” Germans charged me with inciting Cincinnati ear, during which he was listed p,q yctions on “Collecting Evi- Miami. Fa. : s a hostage and condemned 0 ,..... and Making the Arrest” will Minneapolis-St. Pau i Ake Omaha, Neb. “I wrote the six novelettes and of zone 1, Indianapolis civilian de- pittsburgh EVENTS TOMORROW
a —- wi p.m.
head of a state which has declared affairs. right hand. {draw German troops from Italy. through Oct. 31. . Tires ‘say that perhaps the moronic little HERE IS THE TRAFFIC RECORD i Hobert, Daisy Blair. at 2321 Columbia. al therefore, is mot responsible fer errern dresses. for canning sugar. Allctments are Fuel Oil |ganizational blunder.” He indicated Accidents : Reck LLL ‘entirely within the broad policy | Failure to step at Writer M izes 8 Work | Totals mn Ss. Weather BUCO | : i a m..... 8 club, noon. famous novelists and actors, nmped, ., tug-boats with an historical! | , orized for transcribing. ‘between the Dutch and the Ger- Atlanta {Evansville and seek with the Gestapo {oy a pLANS TALK ON EVIDENCE {Kansas City, Mo. . old woman. ‘meeting of auxiliary police division! Oklahoma City .. D.&. Ses arsRBR 23
