Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 12 April 1944 — Page 3
ro A
3
it
O. Elmore R. Bell OWEN E. ELMORE, son of Mr.
1and Mrs, Dewey E. Elmore, 243 N. Mount st., has been graduated from
INDIANAPOLIS
| APPROVAL DUE
; 3 x rr N : ) AY, 11 iy. OWI GIVES BEST [MILITARY MEN | » TN Wi Sol = ia! i ih a SE . hi ; SL bru PICTURE OF U, S. LEAD IN VOTING — & y ii ; : : 4 Sem—— 3 ¢ ed to 0. K. | Broadcast ‘Dressed Up’ McArthur and Stassen Falot Cast 4 Version of Events |m ‘vored in Illinois, Nebraska v ; 2 : . + Pian, In Americal : G. 0. P. Primaries. 0, in a state- | Ro a (Continued From Page One) gisiators’ desks, 1 (Contitied From Fate ONE) ic tyvHem W. Hertrieh | 10515; Brooks, 8201. (Democrat ® Spesial session stable” or agrecible contesshen| JOHN W. HAUSE. son of MS. oer 13,863; Heaton, 13718. bly to authorize or other high officials supporting May Sheets, 238 N. Walcott st., has| ya tf as evident federal soldier ~ § this objective. It bangs away with been promoted to sergeant in the Dewey's popularity w * lection this fall. newspaper editorials and columnists’ | A. A. F. : [from the start of the vote coun er vote bill, ap- comments aimed in the same direc.| PVT. WILLIAM F. HERDRICH, He took an early lead, but this soon ian legislative J tion. Scores: of radio scripts are carpenter in the A. A. F, has Ai yas overcome by Stassen whose authorize tHe } slanted ‘this way.’ rived in England, according to Word | supporters waged an intensive cameral ballots and recelved by his. parents, Mr. and|paign in his behalf. casting of the | ; Quiet on AMG, Mrs. Charles F. Herdrich, 1349 Edge-| ~The vote was one of the lightest te and county OWT talks much about some new | mont ave, ever cast in a ‘Nebraska primary. in the armed t facts, little about others. It plays|™ = Aa Rain, snow and sleet combined with : up the united nations relief and I an apathetic interest in the camt the G. O. P. rehabilitation administration — R paign discouraged a heavier turnable” the C. I d UNRRA—conveying a picture of saat out.
at in case the 3
U. 8. help for millions in foreign.
i
Halt Rise, Weather
Fair, Warmer Weather {0 WIR elvis tn the presi
dential race “to the end,” Senator
The voting yesterday provided the second test for Stassen and Mac-
FLOOD CRESTS ==" S52 InyASION PATH.
Y, of
Wisconsin’s G. ,
'|the naval air station at Corpus
Christi, Tex., and commissioned an ensign in the U. 8. naval reserve. ROBERT R., BELL, torpedoman’s mate 3-c, son” of Mr. and Mrs. N. H. Bell; 927 N. DeQuincy st., has completed basic training at the submarine school at New London,
BOMBERS BLAST
10,000 Planes Are Used
gp x
TIMES. __>
SOLDIER VOTE
-
G. 0. P.-Dominated Senate Expected to Pass Bill This Afternoon.
(Continued From Page One)
by Governor Schricker were being pigeon-holed in the Republicandominated committees. This also was the treatment to be given all measures introduced by G, O. P. legislators without official caucus sanction, The governor's proposal to slash 7 cents from the state tax rate or increase state teacher tuition payments caused talk to start in some Republican quarters favoring leg{slation to freeze a sizeable amount of the state balance to keep it from being spent by the state board of finance. This board is composed of Governor Schricker, State Auditor Richard T. James and State Treasurer James Givens, “Most of us don’t think all this money (an estimated $36,000,000) should be left in the hands of three men in this election year” said one
H. Nine
PVT. HAROLD B. NINE has returned from England and is in Bil-
Serve Nation
House Group Approves Ni Spending Bill of 32 Billion
« ® 5 7 i (Continied From Page One) But King warned, “We still have a fiscal 1944. In fiscal 1941 the figures |Vé"Y Jong way to go to win the war were’ 954 and 2,000,000. {in the Pacific.” | In addition, the navy will have| King, who appeared before the {74,925 vessels in the category of subcommittee prior to the recent {nonself-propelled craft, small land- U. 8S. naval-air blow against Palau ing craft under 100 feet long, and and adjacent Japanese bases near |small and special boats, as compared | the Philippines reminded the sube \with 53,937 this year and 2072 in|committee that the closer U. 8. | 1041. forces advance to the Japanese | Vice Adm. M. J. Horne, vice chief homeland, the greater will be the {of the naval operations, told an ap- enemy's power to resist. He pointed
J. Poynter
son of Mrs. Mary B. Stackhouse, 520 N. Gladstone ave.
PVT. JESSE L. POYNTER, son of Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Poynter, 624
training at Camp Blanding, Fla! and has specialized as rifleman. His|
member of an army anti-tank corps, | is in the South Pacific. |
RAID US NOT IN
(Continued From Page One)
G. O. P. legislative leader. “But I
brother, Pvt. Edward W. Poynter {the war in Europe could be liquidat-|set myself up as a prophet.
"led this year. sitting in the position that I do for -
All the top-ranking navy officials | were concerned chiefly with|
Undersecretary of Navy James V.|
lings General hospital. He is the! propriations subcommittee that the out that our lines of communica‘navy’s budget estimates for fiscal| tions, already longer than the | 1945 took into account the possibility {of war ending in Europe this year: But both King and Horne vxpressed ; | pessimism in that connection. King Holly ave, has completed baste) nd others in the hight command were confident six months ago that|able to -predict; at least, I do nos
enemy's will be still longer, “There are various ideas abroad about when this war may end—the war: against Germany and the war against Japan,” he said. “I am un=
But, the time being, -I think there is a
lwho testified at hearings on the|great deal of overoptimism that has bill operations in the Pacific. |
been voiced and that has gained a lot of ground. I endeavor to be a realist. I am by no means a pessi-
principle not to underestimate your
] j Forrestal revealed that the United, mist, but it is a sound military OUR HOTEL ROOMS |States is now a little ahead of its|
[timetable schedule in the Pacific.| enemy.”
cratic minority in the resolution.” [and "advise him of the constit=} MINE UNDERGROUND
lost in transit lands. But it says little about allied ly” then the ins military government—AMG-—which 11 have lost his stands for looking after another $ country’s affairs. It wouldn't be too | law the soldier smart to spread any idea of U. S. leral ballot only world-wide managing or meddling. for the regular . OWI doesn't talk about “island oes not receive hopping” which isn’t popular. Our soldiers march into “liberated” rather than “occupied” areas. YugoChance” slavia's Tito is “general” rather t that all nine | than “marshal,” apparently because
igressmen voted dier vote law the casting of e C. I. O. said: { diana’s general p g a measure to he service man a bill that prochance to the the service and te the federal
posed bill should t if the soldier state war ballot
the latter might suggest political recognition. . : OWI doesn’t boast to France of the accuracy ‘of our high-level bombing in Germany, because the Nazi could then tell the French, when we hit a school or residential area situated near an arms plant in occupied France, that we did it purposely. Incite Sabotage
The OWI has broadcast many messages aimed at inciting sabotage in Nazi-occupied lands, but when
+ |moved to higher ground
strikes occur in northern Italy we are careful to take no credit for them or to link them with anything Il duty for our our short-wave radio may have 0 not give them < been saying. The Nazis could move $€ in with brutal repression and the whole thing could boomerang. News events which may get big headlines in the United States may be passed over or treated very cas~ually in OWI broadcasts abroad. | When congressmen comment: on hy they think all the islands from! whlch we're fighting in the Pacific’ should become ours, OWI doesn't] put that out . |
e federal ballot.
this legislature hearts that they
UNPROVED
pril 12 (U. P.). omobile Dealers Ay that governhave failed to cial qualities in ie “dopes” used pe of making 1 rations go
way the war is being run might be; a passed up entirely, or {fit is felt! necessary to usé it, it might be put| in “proper context.” - That is, OWI might do a roundup showing that! many other congressmen thought otherwise ! A race riot would be “put In proper context,” perhaps, to show that most of America is against; such an occurrence. During the; coal strike, OWI did a research job, on labor's whole war record, playing | Minimize Barkley Revolt Minimize Revolt The world received from OWI a somewhat toned-down version of! the break of Senator Barkley (D.| Ky), senate majority leader, with; President Roosevelt. The OWI basic news account, which was given to all the “language desks” transiat- | ing U. 8. affairs into foreign tongues for short-wave broadcasts
5
& -~ I i t this and said the incident was “not
_ | important in itself.” but as evidence . that in democratic Amgrica the v people do not waive their controls A 4 over government even in wartime, The propaganda “line” change from one country to another. In broadcasts beamed wo Germany we may be quite frank about strikes; they remind German workers that they once had labor unions, too. But talk of strikes isn't stressed much in broadcasts to France—German propaganda there has played heavily on the theme of dissension inside the U. 8S. _ We want the world to know we are not buying our part in the war with dollars; the OWI's short-wave brodacasts often pick up all news available to show Americans ate paying in lives and with their work at hoine. ' A fundamental of the whole propaganda line is to contrast the working of democracy with the oppression of the enemy dictators. Major conflicts of interests within the . country which must be reported are . nearly always set against this background. “It's a delicate, tricky business, on 26 different OWI language desks here, to build 350 radio shows daily around this propaganda line. People who have the requirements to do it are scarce—knowledge of foreign languages, of writing or radio," of the politics and traditions of lands to which propaganda is directed. OWI has had to call a lot of amateurs into the business.
|
*¢ ‘Be senate leader's revolt. JEArs &i- , account included Mr. Barkiey . cusrge that Mr. Roose-| velt's tax veto was an attack on!
| 3
pected crests on the Wabash included: Lafayete, now 20.6 feet, ex- | pected . crest 23 feet; now 19 feet, expected crest 25 feet,
Experts Believe. (Continued From Page One)
the Wabash river stood at 12.7 feet and were expected to crest at 13.5 today. The river fell to 20.5 feet at Wabash ‘after cresting at 208 feet last night. Near Logansport the Wabash rose to 15 feet with the expected crest set at 17 feet. Residents of Patawattomie Point east of Logansport and a strong wind damaged buildings and uprooted trees in Cass county.
Flood Readings Given Other flood readings and ex-
Covington,
and Terre Haute, now 15.8 feet, ex- | pected crest, 23 feet. {
White river at Anderson stood at | the
166 feet and was expected to crest
evacuated by boat from their homes in Irondale. The river was expected crest at 19 feet at Noblesville iomorrow. At Elliston White river was cight
A congressman's criticism of the go. over the flood stags of 17 feet |
and was expected to reach 28 feet before subsiding. The river rose to 20 feet at Edwardsport, 18.1 feet at Seymour, 18.5 fest at Petersburg and 16.8 feet at Hazleton Ft. Wayne authorities were evacuating residents of suburban River
Joseph H. Ball, leader of the proStassen forces, said last night. The former Minnesota governor, now on duty in the Pacific fleet, will not withdraw before the national convention to climb aboard the Dewey bandwagon, Ball said.
660 Claimed for Dewey
In Record Raids; 64 Aircraft’ Lost. =
(Continued From Page One) bombers concentrated their block-
doubt if we'll do anything about it!
“Although all the prisoners caught!
| tional immunity of the members| of this house and request the]
TRAVEL CHECKED
now.”
G.0.P. LEADERS REPLY
_ Ball's statement coincided with a prediction by Senator John Thomas (R. Idaho) that Dewey would be nominated on the first ballot. Thomas declared his personal sur-
busters last night on Aachen, one of the most important railway junctions serving the French and Belgian invasion coasts, a smaller force of heavy bombers simultaneously hit Hannover, another German industrial and communications center.
vey of Republican leaders showed between 660 and 670 pledged to Dewey. Only 530 votes are needed for the nomination.
Crews of planes arriving over Aachen during the final stages of the attack sald huge fires were
TO SCHRICKER PLA
Replying indirectly to the governor's 10-point legislative program offered yesterday, the two Republican legislative floor leaders, Senator John VanNess and Rep. George W. Henley, today issued a state-
ment saying why they believed the special session should be limited to
New. York
Republican leaders
raging in the city. German night fighters tried to break up the raid,
at 175 feet today. Lowlands and To. ote convention sists Was sched
some parks near the river were; . = families were | A Farley was slated to be re-elect {committee after failure of a move to oust him, started by the Albany, ALLIED HEADQUARTERS, Na- Indiana. The people have said, and | sessicn |
were slated to start a drive to entice Willkie into the Dewey camp today. Rolland B. Marvin, close friend of Willkie, planned to confer with him in New York City today in an effort to swing his support to
governor. Meanwhile, at New York City, the
uled to be completed today. James
ed chairman of the state Democratic
{
county Democratic machine, had ples, April 12 (U. P.).—Allied war- are saying, that this special failed planes bombed and burned German should be limited to soldier legisla-| communications lines across the tion only. {center of the Italian boot from | {dawn to dusk yesterday and R. A.!the people of Indiana are in full acfourth term ‘p pignt raiders followed through cord with our position on these in the early morning hours today matters. We believe that no politics with a blockbuster assault on the should be played with so sacred a received an indirect fourth term Monfalcone submarine and torpedo privilege as the right to vote, and that our deciison to limit our con-
Fourth Term Advocated
t Tammany Leader Edward V.
{Laughlin called for a
for Mr. Roosevelt at a meeting ast ‘night. Mr. Roosevelt already has!
i
i i
indorsement from Senator Alben W.!
but most of them arrived too late to more than harass the bombers on their return journey. { Aachen was hit hard by the] R. A. F. last July, when aerial photographs showed 500 acres devastated and 80 of its 140 factories
damaged or destroyed.
| Italy Lines Are ‘Blasted
boat yards in northern Italy.
The intensified aerial bombard- siderations to these patriotic mat-
soldier legislation only.
proposed measures may be,” the two |
lin the recent raid at the Claypool \were Democrats,” he said, “we Re-| | publicans ought to go along with [the resolution in spite of the fact, that no Republicans . violate the] laws. It's a good resolution and ought to pass.” And it did by a rousing unani{mous vote with some cheers from {the gallery. | The resolution, which will ia - permanent document in the | journal of the legislature, stated: | “I move that the. clerk of this
|
become
“However meritorious any ‘other house be instructed to notify the
{mayor of the city of Indianapolis
leaders said, “it is the consensus | that the legislature is in session
mayor that he instruct his chief of | police to refrain from raiding or otherwise distu*bing the inhabitants of the. Claypool hotel while they are in pusuit of their business and pleasures, innocent or otherwise.” .
ALLIED PARLEY HINTED LONDON, April 12 (U. P)—A
German broadcast recorded by the ‘BBC today said President Roosevelt tigation are expected to have an ime 'has left for the Caribbean to meet portant
Prime Miinster Churchill and make “last minute plans regarding operations in Europe in the coming weeks."
WASHINGTON, April 12 (U. PJ). —A three-man commission appoint
ed by President Roosevelt report{ed today that a survey of 76.2 per cent of the bituminous coal indus-
| try showed underground travel time {of miners averaged 55.82 minutes, {10.82 minutes more than was assumed in the wage contract now ‘awaiting war labor board approval. Results of fhe travel time inves
bearing . in determining | whether the board will approve the | contract negotiated by the United Mine Workers with 70 per cent of
{the industry.
of the Republican party leadership that all these items can wait until the next regular session, which is only nine months away. In case of extreme emergency, which might
arise during the intervening time,
session call by the governor.
{| The Republican party must also | meet its obligations to the people of
Haven as the Maumes river swelled Barkley, senate majority leader. In} ment. further impairing the bat- ters is sound.”
to five feet above flood stage with- ... ogress in New York City last tered lines of supply for the Nazi|
night, Barkley hailed the adminis- |armies in the south, coincided with | a violent upsurge of patrol fighting la
out cresting. Wayne schools were closed.
Coal Pits Flooded
Coal pits in Clay county lay flooded and idle and the Eel river surged over state roads, isolating Poland and Clay City. Howard county streams flooded the area near Kokomo and Wayne county schools closed at Cambridge
township
{City, Pershing, Dublin and Green's
Fork. L. Marshall Vogler, director of the state agricultural adjustment
overseas, tended to minimize the importance Administration office, reported that
the high waters were drowning out crops in some lowlands and would put the farmers behind in their plowing and spring planting.
congressional integrity, but some| Ihe extent of the damage, he OWI broadcast scripts overlooked Said, would depend on the weather
later on, after the crops are planted. He indicated that the heavy rainfall would do more good than harm, however, since the state had been short on rainfall until now.
“TURKS GIVEN WARNING
| ANKARA, April ‘11 (Delayed) |(U. P).—The United States and
Ito stop shipping essential war materials to Germany, informed sourcés reported today.
AskMore Money For.Propaganda
WASHINGTON; April 12.— Big as U. 8S. propaganda activities now are, they'll get bigger if office of war information plans carry, President Roosevelt is asking congress for an OWI appropriation of $64,300,000 for the fiscal year . beginning July 1. That's far more than OWI's $25,135,000 in 1943 and its $38,222,000 for this year, The overseas branch would get the great bulk of the new fund—$59,562,101. Domestic operations are down for$2,464,000; administration would cost $2,363,000. This year OWI is spending $3,617,853 on a vast flood of propaganda pamphlets and leaflets, $2,707,000 on its radio
{Great Britain have asked Turkey
tration's record as the greatest in the nation's history and challenged
Republican critics to come out in the open and “what portions | of the new deal they would repeal or nullify. '
Meanwhile, it was disclosed in| Washington that Vice President; Henry: A. Wallace will leave late] this spring or early summer for an} jofficial mission to Chungking, | China, | Wallace was not available for | comment, but it has been reported; that he will go to Moscow and London, in addition to Chungking, leading to speculation that the vice] president might be out of the country during the Democratic national convention in July. {
On the War Fronts
April 12, 1944
AIR WAR—Greatest air war in history passes 100 hour mark as | long processions of allied bombers | stream toward Germany in wake! | of R. A. F. night raids that satu. rated Aachen, invasion defense! railway junction, with 1680 tons. |
{
Crimea, drives into central plains after splitting stranded garrison
in spectacular 73-mile advance. PACIFIC—American forces seize five
New Guinea coast, ITALY~Allied warplanes bomb and
in northern Italy.
more bases in Marshall islands
burn German communication | lines across Italian boot and R.| Big Four unit, American Legion of the present incumbent,” he said, A. F. night raiders follow block auxiliary, will meet at 8 p. m. to- | “though he has made no effort to buster assault on Monfalcone morrow at the World War Memorial ; change the system. The office is
submarine and torpedo boat yards building. Mrs, Julia Carrelli will {an inheritance from former gen-
and artillery duels on the land fronts below Rome. : CA unique reported that Ger-
man and allied artillery traded heavy blows on the“Anzio beach-| head and in the Cassino area, ac-| companied by increasingly bitter |
patrol clashes.
‘Prisoner of War’
Is (Porky (Wade |
PASADENA, Cal, April 12 (U
classes at the high school today | with his “P. W.” monogram miss-
t i | P.).—Porky Wade returned to his | i : ing from the back of his jacket— |!
anything to keep the peace.
Porky wore his monogrammed | jacket yesterday while delivering eggs and an alert war worker |
mistook the initials for the usua “Prisoner - of War” called police, who collared him:
GETS PYLE SOUVENIR
ON ‘SHORT SNORTER’ WAYNE GOP WOMEN
RUSSIA—One of three Soviet col-| #Georse Gardner, 1833 Lockwood | ju4pe John L. Niblack, Republic umns, clamping stranglehold on St- collected an Ernie Pyle souvenir |
{recently via short snorter bill. i Mr,
| Co., 1300 Beecher st.
ment of supply ports on northern Brown, Myrna Loy, Capt. “Spud”
| Connick of TWA and a marine.
AUXILIARY TO MEET
| preside.
brand and |
Add Firepower To Fast Bomber
SANTA MONICA, Cal, April 12 (U. P.).—America’s fastest bomber now is one of the most heavily armed, the army disclosed today with announcement that the Douglas A-20 has added a power | turret giving it a total of nine 50-caliber machine guns, The twin-engined attack bomber has six guns mounted in the nose, one which fires from the plane’s belly and two in the topside turret, which swings in a complete circle. Alternate arma- | ment, still a secret, also may be i mounted. Designated the Havoc, the A-20 | originally was a night fighter and has been in action in every theaof , war. including Russia, { where more than 2000 have been lend-leased.
NIBLACK ADDRESSES
11 ter
1members of the assembly stand ready to respond to another special |
“It is our considered opinion that
STRAUSS SAYS: ...ITS
ONE DAY NEARER VICTORY
DEAR SIR: You can get into a pair of
| Gardner got the dollar bill | of 150,000 re of Dzankhoi | {rom Floyd Smith, who bought some | by captu ‘candy at the Gardner candy stand |in the Indianapolis Wire Bound Box |
The bill, signed by persons who C while U. 8. destroyers join in al- have flown across the ocean, con-|MOre modern methods. most continuous aerial bombard- | tained the names of Mr. Pyle, Joe E.}
‘an candidate for county prosecutor, told members of the Wayne Township Women's Republican club at their noon meeting today that, if elected, he would “get the prosecutor’s office to functioning as it should with full-time deputies and
Judge Niblack stated that the | county office needs to be revitalized, | comparing its present conditipn to | that of “a sleepy rural county | courthouse of the 1890's.” | “It is not particularly the fault
| erations.”
EVENTS TODAY
Red Cross annual fund campaign. Tin can collection, south of 16th st. | Indiana Tuberculosis
baum community center, §:15 p. m National Woman's Service Lea
association, Hotel incoln. Molly Picon, actress, recital concert, Kirsh-
gue, Ine,
IN INDIANAPOLIS-EVENTS-VITALS
85th place, Chicago, Ill: Harper, 19, of 1032 S. New Jersey. Omer H. Bennett, 28, Camp Robison, Ark. Roberta Isabell Thomas, 28, 928 Wood lawn, : William Everett Manier, 26, Phyllis Josephine Reddick, 19, o
U. 8 on
Betty Jean
1433 N. Holmes. Robert Lowell King. 26, of 627 Tecumseh:
BIRTHS : Girls =| Charles. Ruth Henzie. at St. Vincent's. Leo, Barbara Parkerson, at St. Vincent's, ; | Cairns, Margaret Patterson, at St. Vincent's. ; Ralph, Plorence Reed, at St. Vincent's. Robert, Margaret Ogle, at Methodist,
-_t
Enthusiasm or personal feelings ram bureau, $1,368,000 on Columbia club, 8 p. m. : f people on the language desks, Progra A American Women's Voluntary services, Mary Margaret Burch, 22, of 1112 W.| Grady, Evelyn Stubbs, at Methodist. 4 hy {3 a. 5 2 . \atives of foreign lands, may over- Meeting for parents, of boys of military James Ebitley aE 14th; Helen i Boys . ‘ome judgment in dealing with war . aes ast Ang lor whe bo 93 A aciven. Wesh-| Henry Albert Rager, 31, of 2208 Slane, | SOIT. An Rd Tints, news affecting these countries, and : Ayward-Bareus American Legion auxti-| Norwood O. Eleanor Jane Easigr. 19.) paymond. Kathryn Monaghan, at St. OWI tries to enforce controls to OFFICIAL WEATHER Gamma om Zeta, I hates Jon Josuph Eliott: at 33 R Minels; No hor Koetter, at Coleman. : prevent boners. Control desks knock|| - © ; poiotel. 7:30 pm. , ioe Or Hanisvine Jad: Mar. | Raymond. Betty Brinkman. at Methodist. all around the down short-wave scrips ° exulting ee U: S. Weather Bureau, ngependnt Je workers, Washington a Louise Casey, 35, of 326 Parkway. | Robert: pentba Stoves at_Methiodist, over the destruction of Berlin and All Data in Central War Time Simones Robert G. Wilder, 20, Pt Hairison: AMMA | porresi. Margaret Hilligoss. at Methodist. crease-resistant proclaiming that German morale is| Sunrise... 6:11 | Sunset ... 7:20 EVENTS TOMORROW a Southern Hills, ayton. a "| Owen, Louise May, at Methodist. : . ester K., Olszewski, 21, U. 8. army; . dreadful, catch translating errors, TEMPERATURE + Bed Crows Sniual Tuna eampige. ‘Ruth Boiton, 19, of 320 E. North. DEATHS throw out useless trivia such as —April 12, 1943 Pan American day, World War Memorial, | Earl Allison Holwager, 38, of 1538 W. \ comment on the education of Vice| 7am. ..... 4 | 2pm ..... 51 | night. Wourion ton... Aptites Wilcox; flies Louise Leep, 38, of 1538 Gewge Pella, 78, at Methodist, chronic President Wallace's. daughter. Some | Precipitation 24 hrs, end. 7:30 a. m... .04| hotel. : > Ernest Creamer Jr. 21, of 1850 E. Van-| May E. Baker, 22, at City, tuberculosis. | 13.50 and up. - faux pas get out on the air; many Total precipitation since Jan. 1.. .... 12.08 | Garden Clubs of Indiana, Lincoln hotel, Buren, Phoenix, Ariz.; Martha Crisp, 19, | Henry H. Spiker, 85, at 3537 W. Michigan, .s Excess since Jan. 1 .... .. .......... 93 9 a.m. of 3144 Mars Hill rd. 3 arteriosclerosis. are caught in the control and Indianapolis Real Estate board, Washing-| William N. Proctor, 47, of 914 Highland | Howard Bertram Richardson, 53, at 2401 monitoring sections The following table shows the tempera- ton hotel, 12:15 p. m. ave.; Pearl M. Messer, of 914 Highland| Cold Springs a esteem» N. Rite : ’ ? : : publican third 3 -| ave. : Gs Le George W. Russell, 87, a .” Ritter, ton attractions, ; ; tou | B7ublicans of the ward 103 Col ot Troutman, 43. South Bend, Ind. Hp 3 . m, s h . .i| cerebral apoplexy. . Next: How OWI makes a” tran- 8 on county infantile paralysis, Indian-| Kathleen Marie Nelderer, . 36, South George. Vicars, 82, at 118 8. Rural, car- * je and red. scription dramatizir all order [Do3ton 37 | apolls AthleMe club, 13;15 p.m. Bend. \ cinoma. ption matizing a m Chicago .... 38 polis Business and Professionsi| Orville D. Worrell, 24, U. 8. army, Stout | Shirley Anna Diggins, 13, at 2626 Wade, catalog. . |Cinciunati .. 42 | Women's club, clubhouse, 8 p.m. Field: Dorothy Louise Sherlin, 33, 8t.| chronic myocarditis. v . 3 agents session, Underwriters| James, Minn, Jefferson M. Brisbin, 86, at 124 N. East,
lilace, luggage, CRUSADE LEADER HERE
Glasgow, tonight at the North 52d st and No r
The Rev. James A. Stewart, foun- _ der and director of the European | evangelistic crusade and a native of will speak at 7:30 p. m.|New Baptist chi
1 Eva
-
Indiana division. B. & O. railroad m.
1:30 p.m. : ;
: ncoln, 7:45 p. : Ln of Evangelical eos Whzinrelin
Ben L. Duvall, 26, U | Feld, Ind.; Delols
n.
Cundiff, 21, of 1638 rold Kenneth
. 8. army, Freeman ol Tinsley, 24, of 41 lark. 26. of 3936 E. 30th: Helen
Light, 23, U. 8. army, Ft Maxine Kiige, 21.
acute nephritis. Mary Jane Hier,
87, at 2501 Madison, chronic myocarditis. Jostph 4. Carr, 71, at City, chronic nehritls. . Prank ‘Dickerson, ‘17, at City, acute hepaAugustus Prancis Cronan, 63, at 1405 E.
Raymond, ; Edward Charles Kriel, 59, at 17 W. Hamp-
t 2343 N, Talbott,
Celebrated SERVICE OXFORDS (good leather) at 495.
OR YOU can step along with Messrs. HANAN & Sons in a pair of the “Hand Mades”—
(One of the Finest Oxfords on Earth) —at M11.
And in between , . . a very large and goodly company. FOR INSTANCE . . . there is a Special-featured group of husky
oxfords at 6.85.
And the CUSTOMFIELDS of good stocky leathers, wing tip and plain toes and medallion tip . . . and moccasin types oe mainly 7.85 and 9.85. ’ . .
In the upper bracket alongside the Hanans are the NETTLETONS in Specially Selected lasts.
HANAN! A fine old honored family . . . that is abreast of tomorrowl The HANAN TOUCHSTONES are 10.50 and up. The HANAN HURDLERS . . . bring a revolutionary new comfort on earth. . . . (This is achieved by recently developed methods of attaching the forepart of the sole directly to the uppers.)
THERE ARE ARMY AND NAYY OXFORDS in various price groups « « » -
© that give a lot of ease in action . . . that retain their Crisp, . . .. Clean, Good-Looking Lines! iv Si .
AND EVERY OXFORD — regardless of price — carries with ta “fitting service extraordinary,” based on long and successful experience,
