Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 29 June 1944 — Page 3

srchan-

your values

carats

-

of British four-engined bombers and Mosquitoes on a 35-mile section of German transportation lines ‘&cross the Pranco-German frontier.

‘ehannel was clearing today there were no reports of new allied aerial attacks on the robot bomb bases in

northern France, from which the ‘ies paid for killing predatory aniGermans intermittently sent the Mls in Michigan increased 34 per pilotiess planes into southern Eng- | jeent in the last 10 months, accordland duririg the night and into Ing to the state conservation com-

daylight today.

The night attacks by hundreds of] hunters collected $38,205 in state heavy four-engined and medium Premium payments for destruction

bombers were centered on Metz and Blainville in eastern France near the German border, and Saarbrucken, just inside Germany. The three cities are on main highways and railroads running across the border between Germany and eastern France, where aerial recon- ‘ Daissance revealed the Germans have begun moving huge reinforcements toward the Normandy battlefront. Twenty heavy British bombers Were lost in the raids on Metz and Blainville, indicating that the allies had dispatched a formidable aerial force in an attempt to stem the flow of enemy supplies and men to the front,

_ Mosquito bombers carried out the , Indi

$38,000 IN BOUNTIES |

Although the weather over the

right waist gun and Richard finished off the passing German with the left waist gun.

PAID IN MICHIGAN

LANSING, Mich. (U. P.).—Boun-

| mission. Michigan trappers and

of unwanted animals in the 10 months period ending April 30.

SOUTH BEND MAN KILLED SOUTH BEND, June 29 (U. P.) — Richard Weston, 74, operator of a Punch and Judy carnival show, died in St. Joseph hospital from injuries sustained yesterday when he was

struck by an automobile as he| remained in a critical condition its new canned goods values for today.

IN INDIANAPOLIS-EVENTS-VITALS

walked along U. 8S. 31.

Sixiy-8fth Indiana department encampment, Grand Army of the Reputlie.

Sunise Hadassah a Hadassah Marott hotel, 6:15

EVENTS TODAY |

Miss Anita Ebaugh

The Women of the Moose will hold a public initiation and. in-

of Indianapolis lodge No. 17, and officers of lodge No. 17. In the absence of Mark Gray, supreme governor of Moose, Miss Stover, in whose honor 100 candidates are to be initiated, will be the installing regent for the new officers. The following will be installed: Mrs. Mae Aufderheide, junior graduate regent; Miss M, Anita Ebaugh, senior regent; Mrs. Anna Simmons, junior regent; Mrs. Lois Ogden, chaplain; Mrs, Beulah Murray, recorder; Mrs. Phoebe Hart, treasurer; Miss Gene Stine, guide; Mrs. Mary Hurch, assistant guide; Mrs. Lillian Blanchard, argus, and Mrs, Muriel Eskridge, sentinel. Mrs. Effie Traughber, membership chairman, will be in charge of arrangements of the program for the evening.

CHILD'S CONDITION CRITICAL

Robert Lowder, 20 months old,

who was accidentally shot by 5-year- | leven distribution in July, he said, old Ralph McNeal, 632 S. New Jer- | she will find it slightly more diffiin the yard of the Lowder cult to get,

sey st. home at 629 Home Place yesterday,

Institute of America, Highland Gon and

Country club, + Afternoon and night.

EVENTS TOMO) TOMORROW Phi Daina Pi sorority, Washington hotel

{beef and lamb, and not because of |

| 30 points per person each four weeks remains

| ith Raise in Points of

Most Beefsteaks. | : {Continued From Page One) | vide ‘more ‘uniform distribution of

ny expected decreases in supply.” Personal Ration Unchanged The meat-butter-cheese ration of

unchanged for the July period, and pork, veal and the cheaper cuts of lamb and beef still will be point-free. Butter will be unchanged at 12 points a pound and margarine will remain at two points. Hard cheeses will continue to require 10 points a pound, and soft cheeses, which have been ration-free during the past two weeks, will be returned to the ration list at four points a pound. They formerly required 10 points a pound. Only other change annotneed by OPA was an increase in the point value of canned milk, which now will require two points for three one-pound cans instead of one point for two cans as heretofore.

‘Situation the Same’

Leon Borsch, meat rationing director, said OPA had received “no confirmation” of its judgment a month ago that meat supplies would be large enough to justify removal of everything‘ but choice beef cuts from the ration list. He said the present situation of meat supplies was “about the same as in April, before any meat was taken off rationing.” The nation's housewives, he indicated, may expect about as much meat during July, August and Sep-

just ended. He said effects of the return of lamb to rationing would be felt chiefly by the housewife who was able to buy that meat easily during June. As a result of the more

The OPA will announce tomorrow

July.

MARRIAGE LICENSES

polis Control” o the Controllers | 73 p Lioyd W. Smith, 45, of 211 8. Chester; Margaret Mary Burkhart, 44, Barton hotel. George Thomas Hawiiny, n = Col- ’ umbia; Lottie es, 17, © ovey. STRAUSS SAYS: Edward Lewis, 18, of 2012 Hovey; Grace M. IT'S ONE DAY NEARER VICTORY Howard, 16, of 607 Langadale.

DEAR SIR: mest Re me New BOXER-TYPE SWIM TRUNKS

THAT YOU'LL ENJOY

IMMENSELY! (MMERSELY')

The Man's Store has plenty

have the elastic type waistbands—Some are of

those satin-faced twills and that glow back at the sun! 3.95 and 3.00.

There are swim shorts from Catalina—of balloon cloth, very light weight, zelan rested...

They're 4.00.

Variously at

PICTURED are swim —— from BvD of

of shorts—they

poplins—

Evansville Er Pt.

John Allen Howell, 27, R. R. 6, Box Anna Lee Landreth, 23. R. R. 6, Box 573,

David Samuel Corsz, 34. Romulus Feld, Mich.; Frances Berkho! 2608

Sutherland. Por Pred Lewis Miller. 22, Pt. Harrison: Prances Hortense Reese, 21, of 3021 Park. John William Bland. 44, of 922 N. Jefferson; Frances Allen, 26, of 7108 Edgewater place.

| BIRTHS | Girls Walter, Margares Brown, at St. Prancis.

Garnet, Mildred Sindling, at St. Francis, | James, Martha Dod, at St. Vincent's.

at Coleman William, Majorie Johnson, at Methodist, Robert, Margaret Sanders, at Methodist, Boys James, Juanita Coakley, at = ti Louis, Ruth James, Bertha p William David, Mary Snell at St. cent’s. Bernard. Helen Trisler. at St. Vincent's, red. Rodelle Bishop, at Coleman. Lonzo, Martha Bowling, at Coleman, Thomas, Sue Jenkins, at Coleman. Walter, Carolyn Messler, at Coleman, James, Juanita Wilson, at Coleman. Charles. Eileen McCain, at Methodist, Myron, Zela Meulen, at Methodist.

DEATHS

Gekich Lazo. 58. at Flower Mission, pulmona~y tuberculosis.

Clifford Moore, 65, at Methodist, cerebral embolism

William Ashbrook, 83, at City, pulmonary edema

Jack Ronald Coffman, 9, at Riley, rheumatic heart. Prince L. King, 70, at City, subarchnoid hemorrhage. Billy Joe Trusty, 3 days, at Riley, lobar pnheumon George ol Maurer, 53, erson, arteriosclerosis. Norris Willlam Crouch, 23 days, at 1318 . Keystone, icterus neotorium. Betty Jane Shank] 21, at 1016 E. Palmer, embolism. Charles Yous, 65, at City, coronary oecclustor Marguerite Wien 52. at City, carcinoma. Matilda Schoeich, 73, at Long, pneumonia. Christopher Selenjan, 69, at 4314 Central, coronary occlusion Carl B. Snesp, 55, at 1100 W, 33d, cerebral hemorrhage. Fred Schernexas 81. at St. Vincent's, carcinoma. Georgia Inez O'Meara, 74, at 2103 N. Delaware, carcinoma. Samuel Puce 80, at 2305 N. Capitol, pul monary ma. Roy King. an at 2407 Hovey, cardiac de-

Katherine Belle Sutton, 77, at 1210 Pickwick pl., cerebral hemorrhage.

at 445 N. Em-

OFFICIAL WEATHER

U. §. Weather Bureau Ad Data in Central War Time

Sunrise ..... 5:19 | Sunset ... 8:18 1 TEMPERATURE June 29, 1943 T8 8 .... 6 | 2 pm o..... ”

Precipitation 24 hrs. end. 7: $3 4 u 0 Total precipitation since Ji 35 Deficiency since Jan. 1

Arrest avian

The following table shows th . tures 1a other cities yesterday; . Sempete

Atlanta Chicago . Cincinnati ...... Cleveland . Denver sh s (city) Bali a Mo. . a.

tember as.in the three-month period |

macht.” “During the worst days of 1941” he added, “we didn’t live through one-tenth of what the Germans are experiencing today.” Thousands of Germans were said

peasant’s garb. Of the 22 divisions so far ac-| counted for in the White Russian | offensive, five were encircled and| destroyed at Vitebsk, five more were surrounded and were being annihilated in Bobrusk and 12 others were being pounded to pieces by

Soviet troops, tanks and guns be-

reminiscent on Stalingrad.

head south through Krugloye on the

| West bank of the Drut river in an

sky's 1st White Russian army that seized Klichev, some 50 miles to the south. . General Captured

A junction of the two columns!

.i would complete the encirclement of 18 miles north’ of Mogilev, and the remnants of 12 shattered en-|BYXOV, 23 miles south, also were

emy divisions which yielded Mogilev, 40 miles south of Orsha, yesterday after their commander, Lt. Gen. Bamler, and his staff were captured. Rokossovsky’s army also seized Osipovichi, 26 miles northwest of Bobruisk, in ramming the southern end of the great Soviet pincers to within 60 miles southeast of Minsk and opened a drive toward the Baranowicze gap, 75 miles southwest of Minsk. Smashing 36 miles west of Bobruisk, the Russians captured the railway station of Stari Dorogi and pressed on toward Baranowicze, some 90 miles to the west. It was! through the Baranowicze gap in the Pripet marshes that both Hitler and! Napoleon struck at Moscow and that Russian armies throughout history have driven toward Brest-Lit-ovsk, Warsaw and, beyond, Berlin.

At Bobruisk, Rokossovsky’s legions! LONDON, June 29 (U. P.).—Maj.| relentlessly tightened their ring of Gen. encirclement about the remnants of | started soldiering as a private in the | tween the Dnepr and Drug rivers| five enemy divisions. Bombs and “famous 1st” division, U. S. army, | nas, unable to reach world markets, west of Mogilev in a slaughterishells rained constantly on the | now is commanding it in Normandy, {underwent war-time conversion into ‘doomed garrison and its annihila- ‘allied headquarters disclosed today.! ethyl aleohol.

infantry - 15,000 men at full strength—and inflicted heavy losses on 12 other enemy divisions in Mogilev, a city of 100,000 and last fortress in the White Russian “fatherland line” yesterday. Pushing on another 10 miles, the Soviets captured Senkovo. Skhlov,

captured and the last enemy-held sector of the Leningrad-Odessa rail-

way, most important north-south ./line in Russia, was cleared. At the northern end of the em{battled White Russian front, the 1st Baltic army captured Lepel, 20 miles from the old Polish border and between Borishov and Polotsk. Here, too, the Germans were being killed or captured by the | hundreds. Five hundred surrendered |

midway

in one sector alone.

On the Finnish front, the Russians seized Pedoselga, 18 miles from Petrozavodsk, capital of the Kare-

| Scottish Rite. He Senton, Mich, and joined the Standard Oil Co. in Detroit in 1913. Before moving to the company’s Indiana headquarters in Chicago, he managed division offices in

lian Soviet republic, and drove! {South Bend and Evansville. almost to the pre-1939 Finnish| Survivors besides Mrs. Gant and

{border on the Aunus Isthmus.

| the widow, Mrs. Gladys Fillingham

The port and railway station of of 443 Hill rd, Winnetka, Ill, inViipuri on the gulf of Finland, also! clude a son, Jack, of the Great

| was captured.

HUEBNER HEADS ‘IST’

Clarence R. Huebner,

who |

|Lakes naval training station, and {another ‘daughter, Mrs. Joseph J.

| Yorty of Roscommon, Mich,

MAKE BANANA ALCOHOL WASHINGTON.—Jamaica bana-

STRAUSS SAYS:

oe

Wir

quite

select

term as

why it's

tailored by

There are

it's $45

Loud

The GOODALL FAMILY is represented - (here and there) . .". with its new members. The SPRING WEAVES at 29.75... The Sunfrest at 24.75...

The PALM BEAGHES at 19.50

THE IDEA—is to come into the ke Coolness 9 he Stora S4e is apt

9

H

a

the arrival of few

re-inforcements — a little excursion among the Summer Suits reveals a heartening

ion — (taken as

a whole).

It's not something that we would

"colossal''—but

a man can approach the stock with confidence—of finding somethin

g or other to please—

and to cool and to comfort him.

Every suit is good—precisely

here!

For instance . . . here and there ... there are BOTANY WORSTED TROPICALS,

Daroff at 31.50

limited numbers of

INDIA WATES .. . a fine “double-breaster” will especially catch your eye . . .

FASHION PARK makes its appearance with certain fing suifs . . . for instance with pedigreed gabardines at $65.

Also pedigreed tropicals at $55

¥